Template:Short description Template:Featured article Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use American English Template:Redirect Template:Pedro II of Brazil infobox Template:Pedro II of Brazil Dom PedroTemplate:NbspII (Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga; 2 December 1825 – 5 December 1891), nicknamed the Magnanimous (Template:Langx),Template:Sfn was the second and last monarch of the Empire of Brazil, reigning for over 58 years.Template:Efn

Pedro II was born in Rio de Janeiro, the seventh child of Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil and Empress Dona Maria Leopoldina and thus a member of the Brazilian branch of the House of Braganza ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}). His father's abrupt abdication and departure to Europe in 1831 left the five-year-old as emperor and led to a lonely childhood and adolescence, obliged to spend his time studying in preparation for rule. His experiences with court intrigues and political disputes during this period greatly affected his later character; he grew into a man with a strong sense of duty and devotion toward his country and his people, yet increasingly resentful of his role as monarch.

Pedro II inherited an empire on the verge of disintegration, but he turned Brazil into an emerging power in the international arena. The nation grew to be distinguished from its Hispanic neighbors on account of its political stability, freedom of speech, respect for civil rights, vibrant economic growth, and form of government—a functional representative parliamentary monarchy. Brazil was also victorious in the Platine War, the Uruguayan War, and the Paraguayan War, as well as prevailing in several other international disputes and domestic tensions. Pedro II pushed through the abolition of slavery despite opposition from powerful political and economic interests. The Emperor established a reputation as a vigorous sponsor of learning, culture, and the sciences, and he won the respect and admiration of intellectuals such as Charles Darwin, Victor Hugo, and Friedrich Nietzsche, and was a friend to Richard Wagner, Louis Pasteur, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, among others.

The Emperor was overthrown in a sudden coup d'état that had almost no support outside a clique of military leaders who desired a form of republic headed by a dictator. Pedro II had become weary of emperorship and despaired over the monarchy's future prospects, despite its overwhelming popular support. He did not allow his ouster to be opposed and did not support any attempt to restore the monarchy. He spent the last two years of his life in exile in Europe, living alone on very little money.

The reign of Pedro II ended while he was highly regarded by the people and at the pinnacle of his popularity, and some of his accomplishments were reversed as Brazil slipped into a long period of weak governments, dictatorships, and constitutional and economic crises. The men who had exiled him soon began to see in him a model for the Brazilian Republic. A few decades after his death, his reputation was restored and his remains were returned to Brazil with celebrations nationwide. Historians have regarded the Emperor positively and several have ranked him as the greatest Brazilian.

Early lifeEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

BirthEdit

File:Pedro II 1826 frame removed.png
Pedro at 10 months old, 1826

Pedro was born at 02:30 on 2 December 1825 in the Palace of São Cristóvão, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.<ref>See:

The only legitimate male child of Pedro I to survive infancy, he was officially recognized as heir apparent to the Brazilian throne with the title Prince Imperial on 6 August 1826.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Empress Maria Leopoldina died on 11 December 1826, a few days after a stillbirth, when Pedro was a year old.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Two and a half years later, his father married Princess Amélie of Leuchtenberg. Prince Pedro developed an affectionate relationship with her, whom he came to regard as his mother.<ref>See:

Early coronationEdit

File:RetratodompedroIIcrianca.JPG
Pedro II at age 12 wearing court dress and the Order of the Golden Fleece, 1838

Upon leaving the country, Emperor Pedro I selected three people to take charge of his son and remaining daughters. The first was José Bonifácio de Andrada, his friend and an influential leader during Brazilian independence, who was named guardian.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The second was Mariana de Verna, who had held the post of aia (governess) since the birth of Pedro II.Template:Sfn As a child, the then-Prince Imperial called her "Dadama", as he could not pronounce the word dama (Lady) correctly.Template:Sfn He regarded her as his surrogate mother and would continue to call her by her nickname well into adulthood out of affection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The third person was Rafael, an Afro-Brazilian veteran of the Cisplatine War.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He was an employee in the Palace of São Cristóvão whom Pedro I deeply trusted and asked to look after his son—a charge that he carried out for the rest of his life.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Bonifácio was dismissed from his position in December 1833 and replaced by another guardian.<ref>See:

The possibility of lowering the young Emperor's age of majority, instead of waiting until he turned 18, had been floated since 1835.<ref>See:

ConsolidationEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Imperial authority establishedEdit

File:Pedro II of Brazil by Rugendas 1846 original.jpg
Pedro II at age 20 wearing court dress, 1846

Removal of the factious regency brought stability to the government. Pedro II was seen nationwide as a legitimate source of authority, whose position placed him above partisanship and petty disputes. He was, however, still no more than a boy, and a shy, insecure, and immature one.Template:Sfn His nature resulted from his broken childhood, when he experienced abandonment, intrigue, and betrayal.Template:Sfn Behind the scenes, a group of high-ranking palace servants and notable politicians led by Aureliano Coutinho (later Viscount of Sepetiba) became known as the "Courtier Faction" as they established influence over the young Emperor. Some were very close to him, such as Mariana de Verna and Steward Paulo Barbosa da Silva.Template:Sfn Pedro II was deftly used by the Courtiers against their actual or suspected foes.Template:Sfn

The Brazilian government secured the hand of Princess Teresa Cristina of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. She and Pedro II were married by proxy in Naples on 30 May 1843.<ref>See:

In late 1845 and early 1846, the Emperor made a tour of Brazil's southern provinces, traveling through São Paulo (of which Paraná was a part at this time), Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul. He was buoyed by the warm and enthusiastic responses he received.Template:Sfn By then Pedro II had matured physically and mentally. He grew into a man who, at Template:Convert tall with blue eyes and blond hair, was seen as handsome.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> With growth, his weaknesses faded and his strengths of character came to the fore. He became self-assured and learned to be not only impartial and diligent, but also courteous, patient and personable. Barman said that he kept "his emotions under iron discipline. He was never rude and never lost his temper. He was exceptionally discreet in words and cautious in action."Template:Sfn Most importantly, this period saw the end of the Courtier Faction. Pedro II began to fully exercise authority and successfully engineered the end of the courtiers' influence by removing them from his inner circle while avoiding any public disruption.Template:Sfn

Abolition of the slave trade and warEdit

File:Pedro II of Brazil 1848.jpg
Pedro II around age 22, Template:Circa 1848. This is the earliest surviving photograph of the Emperor

Pedro II was faced by three crises between 1848 and 1852.Template:Sfn The first test came in confronting the trade in illegally imported slaves. This had been banned in 1826 as part of a treaty with the United Kingdom.Template:Sfn Trafficking continued unabated, however, and the British government's passage of the Slave Trade (Brazil) Act 1845 (8 & 9 Vict. c. 122) authorized British warships to board Brazilian shipping and seize any found involved in the slave trade.Template:Sfn While Brazil grappled with this problem, the Praieira revolt erupted on 6 November 1848. This was a conflict between local political factions within Pernambuco province; it was suppressed by March 1849. The Eusébio de Queirós Law was promulgated on 4 September 1850, which gave the Brazilian government broad authority to combat the illegal slave trade. With this new tool, Brazil moved to eliminate importation of slaves. By 1852, this first crisis was over, and Britain accepted that the trade had been suppressed.Template:Sfn

The third crisis entailed a conflict with the Argentine Confederation regarding ascendancy over territories adjacent to the Río de la Plata and free navigation of that waterway.Template:Sfn Since the 1830s, Argentine dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas had supported rebellions within Uruguay and Brazil. It was only in 1850 that Brazil was able to address the threat posed by Rosas.Template:Sfn An alliance was forged between Brazil, Uruguay and disaffected Argentines, leading to the Platine War and the subsequent overthrow of the Argentine ruler in February 1852.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Barman said that a "considerable portion of the credit must be ... assigned to the Emperor, whose cool head, tenacity of purpose, and sense of what was feasible proved indispensable."Template:Sfn

The Empire's successful navigation of these crises considerably enhanced the nation's stability and prestige, and Brazil emerged as a hemispheric power.Template:Sfn Internationally, Europeans began to regard the country as embodying familiar liberal ideals, such as freedom of the press and constitutional respect for civil liberties. Its representative parliamentary monarchy also stood in stark contrast to the mix of dictatorships and instability endemic in the other nations of South America during this period.<ref>See:

GrowthEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Pedro II and politicsEdit

At the beginning of the 1850s, Brazil enjoyed internal stability and economic prosperity.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Under the prime ministry of Honório Hermeto Carneiro Leão (then-Viscount and later Marquis of Paraná) the Emperor advanced his own ambitious program: the conciliação (conciliation) and melhoramentos (material developments).Template:Sfn Pedro II's reforms aimed to promote less political partisanship, and forward infrastructure and economic development. The nation was being interconnected through railroad, electrical telegraph, and steamship lines, uniting it into a single entity.Template:Sfn The general opinion, both at home and abroad, was that these accomplishments had been possible due to Brazil's "governance as a monarchy and the character of Pedro II".Template:Sfn

Pedro II was neither a British-style figurehead nor an autocrat in the manner of Russian czars. The Emperor exercised power through cooperation with elected politicians, economic interests, and popular support.Template:Sfn The active presence of Pedro II on the political scene was an important part of the government's structure, which also included the cabinet, the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate (the latter two formed the General Assembly). He used his participation in directing the course of government as a means of influence. His direction became indispensable, although it never devolved into "one-man rule."Template:Sfn In his handling of the political parties, he "needed to maintain a reputation for impartiality, work in accord with the popular mood, and avoid any flagrant imposition of his will on the political scene."Template:Sfn

The Emperor's more notable political successes were achieved primarily because of the non-confrontational and cooperative manner with which he approached both issues and the partisan figures with whom he had to deal. He was remarkably tolerant, seldom taking offense at criticism, opposition or even incompetence.Template:Sfn He did not have the constitutional authority to force acceptance of his initiatives without support, and his collaborative approach towards governing kept the nation progressing and enabled the political system to successfully function.Template:Sfn The Emperor respected the prerogatives of the legislature, even when they resisted, delayed, or thwarted his goals and appointments.Template:Sfn Most politicians appreciated and supported his role. Many had lived through the regency period, when the lack of an emperor who could stand above petty and special interests led to years of strife between political factions. Their experiences in public life had created a conviction that Pedro II was "indispensable to Brazil's continued peace and prosperity."Template:Sfn

Domestic lifeEdit

The marriage between Pedro II and Teresa Cristina started off badly. With maturity, patience and their first child, Afonso, their relationship improved.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Later Teresa Cristina gave birth to more children: Isabel, in 1846; Leopoldina, in 1847; and lastly, Pedro Afonso, in 1848.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> Both boys died when very young, which devastated the Emperor and completely changed his view of the Empire's future.<ref>See:
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> Despite his affection for his daughters, he did not believe that Princess Isabel, although his heir, would have any chance of prospering on the throne. He felt his successor needed to be male for the monarchy to be viable.Template:Sfn He increasingly saw the imperial system as being tied so inextricably to himself, that it would not survive him.Template:Sfn Isabel and her sister received a remarkable education, although they were given no preparation for governing the nation. Pedro II excluded Isabel from participation in government business and decisions.Template:Sfn

Sometime around 1850, Pedro II began having discreet affairs with other women.Template:Sfn The most famous and enduring of these relationships involved Luísa Margarida Portugal de Barros, Countess of Barral, with whom he formed a romantic and intimate, though not adulterous, friendship after she was appointed governess to the emperor's daughters in November 1856.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> Throughout his life, the Emperor held onto a hope of finding a soulmate, something he felt cheated of due to the necessity of a marriage of state to a woman for whom he never felt passion.Template:Sfn This is but one instance illustrating his dual identity: one who assiduously carried out his duty as emperor and another who considered the imperial office an unrewarding burden and who was happier in the worlds of literature and science.Template:Sfn

Pedro II was hard-working and his routine was demanding. He usually woke up at 7:00 and did not sleep before 2:00 in the morning. His entire day was devoted to the affairs of state and the meager free time available was spent reading and studying.Template:Sfn The Emperor went about his daily routine dressed in a simple black tail coat, trousers, and cravat. For special occasions he would wear court dress, and he only appeared in full regalia with crown, mantle, and scepter twice each year at the opening and closing of the General Assembly.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Pedro II held politicians and government officials to the strict standards which he exemplified.Template:Sfn The Emperor adopted a strict policy for the selection of civil servants based on morality and merit.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To set the standard, he lived simply, once having said: "I also understand that useless expenditure is the same as stealing from the Nation".<ref>See:

</ref>

Patron of arts and sciencesEdit

File:Pedro II 1858.jpg
Pedro II around age 32, Template:Circa1858. In the 1850s, books begin to feature prominently in his portraits, a reference to his role as advocate for education.Template:Sfn

"I was born to devote myself to culture and sciences," the Emperor remarked in his private journal during 1862.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He had always been eager to learn and found in books a refuge from the demands of his position.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Subjects which interested Pedro II were wide-ranging, including anthropology, history, geography, geology, medicine, law, religious studies, philosophy, painting, sculpture, theater, music, chemistry, physics, astronomy, poetry, and technology among others.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn By the end of his reign, there were three libraries in São Cristóvão palace containing more than 60,000 books.Template:Sfn A passion for linguistics prompted him throughout his life to study new languages, and he was able to speak and write not only Portuguese but also Latin, French, German, English, Italian, Spanish, Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, Sanskrit, Chinese, Occitan, and Tupi.<ref>See:

The Emperor considered education to be of national importance and was himself a concrete example of the value of learning.Template:Sfn He remarked: "Were I not an Emperor, I would like to be a teacher. I do not know of a task more noble than to direct young minds and prepare the men of tomorrow."Template:Sfn His reign saw the creation of the Brazilian Historic and Geographic Institute to promote research and preservation in the historical, geographical, cultural, and social sciences.Template:Sfn The Imperial Academy of Music and National OperaTemplate:Sfn and the Pedro II School were also founded, the latter serving as a model for schools throughout Brazil.Template:Sfn The Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts, established by his father, received further strengthening and support.Template:Sfn Using his civil list income, Pedro II provided scholarships for Brazilian students to study at universities, art schools, and conservatories of music in Europe.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He also financed the creation of the Institute Pasteur, helped underwrite the construction of Wagner's Bayreuth Festspielhaus, as well as subscribing to similar projects.Template:Sfn His efforts were recognized both at home and abroad. Charles Darwin said of him: "The Emperor does so much for science, that every scientific man is bound to show him the utmost respect".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Pedro II became a member of the Royal Society, the Russian Academy of Sciences, The Royal Academies for Science and the Arts of Belgium and the American Geographical Society.<ref>See:

Clash with the British EmpireEdit

Template:See also

File:Familia imperial 1861.jpg
Pedro II at age 35 along with his wife and daughters visiting a farm in southern Minas Gerais province, 1861

At the end of 1859, Pedro II departed on a trip to provinces north of the capital, visiting Espírito Santo, Bahia, Sergipe, Alagoas, Pernambuco, and Paraíba. He returned in February 1860 after four months. The trip was a huge success, with the Emperor welcomed everywhere with warmth and joy.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> The first half of the 1860s saw peace and prosperity in Brazil. Civil liberties were maintained.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Freedom of speech had existed since Brazil's independence and was strongly defended by Pedro II.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He found newspapers from the capital and from the provinces an ideal way to keep track of public opinion and the nation's overall situation.Template:Sfn Another means of monitoring the Empire was through direct contacts with his subjects. One opportunity for this was during regular Tuesday and Saturday public audiences, where anyone of any social class, including slaves, could gain admittance and present their petitions and stories.<ref>See:
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> Visits to schools, colleges, prisons, exhibitions, factories, barracks, and other public appearances presented further opportunities to gather first-hand information.Template:Sfn

This tranquility temporarily disappeared when the British consul in Rio de Janeiro, William Dougal Christie, nearly sparked a war between his nation and Brazil. Christie sent an ultimatum containing bullying demands arising out of two minor incidents at the end of 1861 and beginning of 1862. The first was the sinking of a British merchant barque on the coast of Rio Grande do Sul after which its goods were pillaged by local inhabitants. The second was the arrest of a group of drunken British sailors who were causing a disturbance in the streets of Rio.<ref>See:

The Brazilian government refused to yield, and Christie issued orders for British warships to capture Brazilian merchant vessels as indemnity.<ref>See:

Paraguayan WarEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:See also

First Fatherland VolunteerEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:Pedro II 1865 01.jpg
Pedro II at age 39, 1865

As war with the British Empire threatened, Brazil had to turn its attention to its southern frontiers. Another civil war had begun in Uruguay as its political parties turned against each other.<ref>See:

Aware of the anarchy in Rio Grande do Sul and the incapacity and incompetence of its military chiefs to resist the Paraguayan army, Pedro II decided to go to the front in person.Template:Sfn Upon receiving objections from the cabinet, the General Assembly and the Council of State, Pedro II pronounced: "If they can prevent me from going as an Emperor, they cannot prevent me from abdicating and going as a Fatherland Volunteer"—an allusion to those Brazilians who volunteered to go to war and became known throughout the nation as the "Fatherland Volunteers".<ref>See:

The Emperor rode within rifle-shot of Uruguaiana, but the Paraguayans did not attack him.Template:Sfn To avoid further bloodshed, he offered terms of surrender to the Paraguayan commander, who accepted.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> Pedro II's coordination of the military operations and his personal example played a decisive role in successfully repulsing the Paraguayan invasion of Brazilian territory.Template:Sfn Before returning to Rio de Janeiro, he received the British diplomatic envoy Edward Thornton, who apologized on behalf of Queen Victoria and the British Government for the crisis between the empires.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Emperor regarded this diplomatic victory over the most powerful nation of the world as sufficient and renewed friendly relations.Template:Sfn

Total victory and its heavy costsEdit

File:Pedro II Admiral Brazil 1870.jpg
Dressed in an admiral's uniform at age 44, 1870—the war years had prematurely aged the EmperorTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Against all expectations, the war continued for five years. During this period, Pedro II's time and energy were devoted to the war effort.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He tirelessly worked to raise and equip troops to reinforce the front lines and to push forward the fitting of new warships for the navy.Template:Sfn The rape of women, widespread violence against civilians, ransacking and destruction of properties that had occurred during Paraguay's invasion of Brazilian territory had made a deep impression on him.Template:Sfn He warned the Countess of Barral in November 1866 that "the war should be concluded as honor demands, cost what it cost."Template:Sfn "Difficulties, setbacks, and war-weariness had no effect on his quiet resolve", said Barman. Mounting casualties did not distract him from advancing what he saw as Brazil's righteous cause, and he stood prepared to personally sacrifice his own throne to gain an honorable outcome.Template:Sfn Writing in his journal a few years previously Pedro II remarked: "What sort of fear could I have? That they take the government from me? Many better kings than I have lost it, and to me it is no more than the weight of a cross which it is my duty to carry."Template:Sfn

At the same time, Pedro II worked to prevent quarrels between the national political parties from impairing the military response.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Emperor prevailed over a serious political crisis in July 1868 resulting from a quarrel between the cabinet and Luís Alves de Lima e Silva (then-Marques and later Duke of Caxias), the commander-in-chief of the Brazilian forces in Paraguay. Caxias was also a politician and was a member of the opposing party to the ministry. The Emperor sided with him, leading to the cabinet's resignation. As Pedro II maneuvered to bring about a victorious outcome in the conflict with Paraguay, he threw his support behind the political parties and factions that seemed to be most useful in the effort. The reputation of the monarchy was harmed and its trusted position as an impartial mediator was severely impacted in the long term. He was unconcerned for his personal position, and regardless of the impact upon the imperial system, he determined to put the national interest ahead of any potential harm caused by such expediencies.Template:Sfn

His refusal to accept anything short of total victory was pivotal in the outcome.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His tenacity was well-paid with the news that López had died in battle on 1 March 1870, bringing the war to a close.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Pedro II turned down the General Assembly's suggestion to erect an equestrian statue of him to commemorate the victory and chose instead to use the money to build elementary schools.<ref>See:

ApogeeEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

AbolitionismEdit

In the 1870s, progress was made in both social and political spheres as segments of society benefited from the reforms and shared in the increasing prosperity.Template:Sfn Brazil's international reputation for political stability and investment potential greatly improved. The Empire was seen as a modern and progressive nation unequaled, with the exception of the United States, in the Americas.Template:Sfn The economy began growing rapidly and immigration flourished. Railroad, shipping and other modernization projects were adopted. With "slavery destined for extinction and other reforms projected, the prospects for 'moral and material advances' seemed vast."Template:Sfn

In 1870, few Brazilians opposed slavery and even fewer openly condemned it. Pedro II, who did not own slaves, was one of the few who did oppose slavery.<ref>See:

Having dealt with the overseas supply of new slaves, Pedro II turned his attention in the early 1860s to removing the remaining source: enslavement of children born to slaves.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Legislation was drafted at his initiative, but the conflict with Paraguay delayed discussion of the proposal in the General Assembly.<ref>See:

To Europe and North AfricaEdit

File:Pedro II of Brazil in Egypt 1871.jpg
French archaeologist Auguste Mariette (seated, far left) and Pedro II (seated, far right) during the Emperor's visit to the Giza Necropolis at the end of 1871

On 25 May 1871, Pedro II and his wife traveled to Europe.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He had long desired to vacation abroad. When news arrived that his younger daughter, the 23-year-old Leopoldina, had died in Vienna of typhoid fever on 7 February, he finally had a pressing reason to venture outside the Empire.<ref>See:

The Emperor proceeded to visit Spain, Great Britain, Belgium, Germany, Austria, Italy, Egypt, Greece, Switzerland, and France. In Coburg, he visited his daughter's tomb.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He found this to be "a time of release and freedom". He traveled under the assumed name "Dom Pedro de Alcântara", insisting upon being treated informally and staying only in hotels.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He spent his days sightseeing and conversing with scientists and other intellectuals with whom he shared interests.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The European sojourn proved to be a success, and his demeanor and curiosity won respectful notices in the nations which he visited. The prestige of both Brazil and Pedro II were further enhanced during the tour when news came from Brazil that the Law of Free Birth, abolishing the last source of enslavement, had been ratified. The imperial party returned to Brazil in triumph on 31 March 1872.Template:Sfn

Religious IssueEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

Soon after returning to Brazil, Pedro II was faced with an unexpected crisis. The Brazilian clergy had long been understaffed, undisciplined and poorly educated, leading to a great loss of respect for the Catholic Church.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The imperial government had embarked upon a program of reform to address these deficiencies.Template:Sfn As Catholicism was the state religion, the government exercised a great deal of control over Church affairs, paying clerical salaries, appointing parish priests, nominating bishops, ratifying papal bulls and overseeing seminaries.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In pursuing reform, the government selected bishops who satisfied its criteria for education, support for reform and moral fitness.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, as more capable men began to fill the clerical ranks, resentment of government control over the Church increased.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The bishops of Olinda and Belém (in the provinces of Pernambuco and Pará, respectively) were two of the new generation of educated and zealous Brazilian clerics. They had been influenced by the ultramontanism, which spread among Catholics in this period. In 1872, they ordered Freemasons expelled from lay brotherhoods.<ref>See:

Pedro II played a decisive role by unequivocally backing the government's actions.<ref>See:

  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> He was a conscientious adherent of Catholicism, which he viewed as advancing important civilizing and civic values. While he avoided anything that could be considered unorthodox, he felt free to think and behave independently.Template:Sfn The Emperor accepted new ideas, such as Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, of which he remarked that "the laws that he [Darwin] has discovered glorify the Creator".Template:Sfn He was moderate in his religious beliefs but could not accept disrespect to civil law and government authority.<ref>See:
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref> As he told his son-in-law: "[The government] has to ensure that the constitution is obeyed. In these proceedings there is no desire to protect masonry; but rather the goal of upholding the rights of the civilian power."Template:Sfn The crisis was resolved in September 1875 after the Emperor grudgingly agreed to grant full amnesty to the bishops and the Holy See annulled the interdicts.<ref>See:
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb,
  • Template:Harvnb.</ref>

To the United States, Europe, and Middle EastEdit

Once again, the Emperor traveled abroad, this time going to the United States. He was accompanied by his faithful servant Rafael, who had raised him from childhood.Template:Sfn Pedro II arrived in New York City on 15 April 1876, and set out from there to travel throughout the country; going as far as San Francisco in the west, New Orleans in the south, Washington, D.C., and north to Toronto, Ontario, Canada.<ref>See:

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> the Netherlands, Switzerland, and Portugal.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He returned to Brazil on 22 September 1877.Template:Sfn

File:Imatrankosken alapaviljonki 2017 05.jpg
Engraved signature by Pedro II while visiting the Imatrankoski rapids in Imatra, Finland; 1876.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Pedro II's trips abroad made a deep psychological impact. While traveling, he was largely freed of the restrictions imposed by his office.Template:Sfn Under the pseudonym "Pedro de Alcântara", he enjoyed moving about as an ordinary person, even taking a train journey solely with his wife. Only while touring abroad could the Emperor shake off the formal existence and demands of the life he knew in Brazil.Template:Sfn It became more difficult to reacclimate to his routine as head of state upon returning.Template:Sfn Upon his sons' early deaths, the Emperor's faith in the monarchy's future had evaporated. His trips abroad now made him resentful of the emperorship assigned to him at the age of five. If he previously had no interest in securing the throne for the next generation, he now had no desire to keep it going during his own lifetime.Template:Sfn

Decline and fallEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

DeclineEdit

File:Pedro II of Brazil Paris 1887.jpg
Pedro II at age 61, in 1887. He became tired of the monarchy and resigned to its demise

During the 1880s, Brazil continued to prosper, and social diversity increased markedly, including the first organized push for women's rights.Template:Sfn On the other hand, letters written by Pedro II reveal a man grown world-weary with age and having an increasingly alienated and pessimistic outlook.Template:Sfn He remained respectful of his duty and was meticulous in performing the tasks demanded of the imperial office, albeit often without enthusiasm.Template:Sfn Because of his increasing "indifference towards the fate of the regime" and his lack of action in support of the imperial system once it was challenged, historians have attributed the "prime, perhaps sole, responsibility" for the dissolution of the monarchy to the Emperor himself.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

After their experience of the perils and obstacles of government, the political figures who had arisen during the 1830s saw the Emperor as providing a fundamental source of authority essential for governing and for national survival.Template:Sfn These elder statesmen began to die off or retire from government until, by the 1880s, they had almost entirely been replaced by a newer generation of politicians who had no experience of the early years of Pedro II's reign. They had only known a stable administration and prosperity and saw no reason to uphold and defend the imperial office as a unifying force beneficial to the nation.Template:Sfn To them, Pedro II was merely an old and increasingly sick man who had steadily eroded his position by taking an active role in politics for decades. Before he had been above criticism, but now his every action and inaction prompted meticulous scrutiny and open criticism. Many young politicians had become apathetic toward the monarchic regime and, when the time came, they would do nothing to defend it.Template:Sfn Pedro II's achievements went unremembered and unconsidered by the ruling elites. By his very success, the Emperor had made his position seem unnecessary.Template:Sfn

The lack of an heir who could feasibly provide a new direction for the nation also diminished the long-term prospects of the Brazilian monarchy. The Emperor loved his daughter Isabel, but he considered the idea of a female successor as antithetical to the role required of Brazil's ruler. He viewed the death of his two sons as being a sign that the Empire was destined to be supplanted.Template:Sfn Resistance to accepting a female ruler was also shared by the political establishment.Template:Sfn Even though the Constitution allowed female succession to the throne, Brazil was still very traditional, and only a male successor was thought capable as head of state.Template:Sfn

Abolition of slavery and coup d'étatEdit

Template:See also

File:Família Imperial por Otto Hees.jpg
The last picture of the imperial family in Brazil, 1889

By June 1887, the Emperor's health had considerably worsened, and his personal doctors suggested going to Europe for medical treatment.Template:Sfn While in Milan he passed two weeks between life and death, even being anointed.<ref>See:

The nation enjoyed great international prestige during the final years of the Empire, and it had become an emerging power within the international arena.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Predictions of economic and labor disruption caused by the abolition of slavery failed to materialize and the 1888 coffee harvest was successful.Template:Sfn The end of slavery had resulted in an explicit shift of support to republicanism by rich and powerful coffee farmers who held great political, economic, and social power in the country.<ref>See:

Although there was no desire in Brazil among the majority of the population to change the form of government, the civilian republicans began pressuring army officers to overthrow the monarchy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They launched a coup d'état, arrested Prime Minister Afonso Celso, Viscount of Ouro Preto and instituted the republic on 15 November 1889.<ref>See:

Exile and legacyEdit

Last yearsEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:Atelier Nadar - Pedro II. (1825-1891), König von Brasilien, auf seinem Totenbett in Paris (Zeno Fotografie).jpg
Pedro, clad in court dress uniform, on his bier, 6 December 1891: the book beneath the pillow under his head symbolized that his mind rests upon knowledge even in death

Teresa Cristina died three weeks after their arrival in Europe, and Isabel and her family moved to another place while Pedro settled first in Cannes and later in Paris.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Pedro's last couple of years were lonely and melancholic, as he lived in modest hotels without money and writing in his journal of dreams in which he was allowed to return to Brazil.<ref>See:

Isabel wished to hold a discreet and private burial ceremony, but she eventually agreed to the French government's request for a state funeral.<ref>See:

The Brazilian republican government, "fearful of a backlash resulting from the death of the Emperor", banned any official reaction.Template:Sfn Nevertheless, Brazilians were not indifferent to Pedro's death, and "repercussions in Brazil were also immense, despite the government's effort to suppress. There were demonstrations of sorrow throughout the country: shuttered business activity, flags displayed at half-staff, black armbands on clothes, death knells, religious ceremonies."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Masses were held in memory of Pedro throughout Brazil, and he and the monarchy were praised in the eulogies that followed.Template:Sfn

LegacyEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

File:Petropolis-Cathedral4.jpg
Tomb of Pedro II and Teresa Cristina in the Cathedral of Petrópolis, Brazil

After his fall, Brazilians remained attached to the Emperor, who was still a popular and highly praised figure.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This view was even stronger among those of African descent, who equated the monarchy with freedom because of his and his daughter Isabel's part in the abolition of slavery.Template:Sfn The continued support for the deposed monarch is largely credited to a generally held and unextinguished belief that he was a truly "wise, benevolent, austere and honest ruler", said historian Ricardo Salles.Template:Sfn The positive view of Pedro II, and nostalgia for his reign, only grew as the nation quickly fell into a series of economic and political crises which Brazilians attributed to the Emperor's overthrow.Template:Sfn

Strong feelings of guilt manifested among republicans, and these became increasingly evident upon the Emperor's death in exile.Template:Sfn They praised Pedro II, who was seen as a model of republican ideals, and the imperial era, which they believed should be regarded as an example to be followed by the young republic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In Brazil, the news of the Emperor's death "aroused a genuine sense of regret among those who, without sympathy for a restoration, acknowledged both the merits and the achievements of their deceased ruler."Template:Sfn His remains, as well as those of his wife, were returned to Brazil in 1921 in time for the centenary of the Brazilian independence. The government granted Pedro II dignities befitting a head of state.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A national holiday was declared and the return of the Emperor as a national hero was celebrated throughout the country.Template:Sfn Thousands attended the main ceremony in Rio de Janeiro where, according to historian Pedro Calmon, the "elderly people cried. Many knelt down. All clapped hands. There was no distinction between republicans and monarchists. They were all Brazilians."Template:Sfn This homage marked the reconciliation of Republican Brazil with its monarchical past.Template:Sfn

Historians have expressed high regard for Pedro II and his reign. The scholarly literature dealing with him is vast and, with the exception of the period immediately after his ouster, overwhelmingly positive, and even laudatory.Template:Sfn He has been regarded by several historians in Brazil as the greatest Brazilian.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In a manner similar to methods which were used by republicans, historians point to the Emperor's virtues as an example to be followed, although none go so far as to advocate a restoration of the monarchy. Historian Richard Graham noted that "[m]ost twentieth-century historians, moreover, have looked back on the period [of Pedro II's reign] nostalgically, using their descriptions of the Empire to criticize—sometimes subtly, sometimes not—Brazil's subsequent republican or dictatorial regimes."Template:Sfn

Titles and honorsEdit

Template:Infobox Royal styles

File:Signature of Pedro II of Brazil.png
Pedro II's signature in official documents
File:Signed initials of Pedro II of Brazil.png
His signed initials in official documents

Titles and stylesEdit

The Emperor's full style and title were "His Imperial Majesty Dom Pedro II, by the Grace of God, and Unanimous Acclamation of the People, Constitutional Emperor and Perpetual Defender of Brazil" ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}).Template:Sfn

HonorsEdit

National Honors

Emperor Pedro II was Grand Master of the following Brazilian Imperial Orders:Template:Sfn

Foreign HonorsTemplate:Sfn

GenealogyEdit

AncestryEdit

The ancestry of Emperor Pedro II:Template:Sfn Template:Ahnentafel

IssueEdit

Name Portrait Lifespan NotesTemplate:Sfn
By Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies (14 March 1822 – 28 December 1889; married by proxy on 30 May 1843)
Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil File:Afonso 03 1846.JPG 23 February 1845 –
11 June 1847
Prince Imperial of Brazil from birth to his death.
Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil File:Isabel circa 1865.jpg 29 July 1846 –
14 November 1921
Princess Imperial of Brazil and Countess of Eu through marriage to Gaston d'Orléans. She had four children from this marriage. She also acted as Regent of the Empire while her father was traveling abroad.
Princess Leopoldina of Brazil File:Leopoldina circa 1868.jpg 13 July 1847 –
7 February 1871
Married Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha with four sons resulting from this marriage.
Pedro Afonso, Prince Imperial of Brazil File:Pedro Prince Imperial 1850.png 19 July 1848 –
9 January 1850
Prince Imperial of Brazil from birth to his death.

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

Template:Notelist

FootnotesEdit

Template:Reflist

References and further readingEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

In PortugueseEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

External linksEdit

Template:S-start Template:S-hou Template:S-reg Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-non Template:S-roy Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-pre |- Template:S-non Template:S-tul Template:S-aft Template:S-end

Template:Monarchs of Brazil Template:Brazilian imperial family Template:Portuguese infantes Template:Empire of Brazil Template:House of Braganza Template:Pretenders to the Brazilian throne since 1889 Template:RAE honorary members Template:Authority control Template:Portal bar