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Luís da Silva Mouzinho de Albuquerque (Lisbon, June 16, 1792 - Torres Novas, December
27, 1865; Portuguese
pronunciation: [luˈiʃ dɐ ˈsiɫvɐ mo(u)ˈziɲu dɨ aɫbuˈkɛɾk(ɨ)])
was a Portuguese military
officer, engineer, poet, scientist and politician, who
distinguished himself during the Liberal Wars and in the conflicts that
marked Portugal's history in the first
half of the 19th century. He served as the Minister of the Kingdom
(a post similar to today's Minister of Internal Affairs) during the
liberal regency of Pedro of Braganza (formerly Pedro I
of Brazil and IV of Portugal). This was the most prominent post
inside the government at that time, which made him the Prime
Minister of Portugal in all but name. He was also several times
minister and deputy minister during the Constitutional Monarchical period. Among
other offices, he served as Chief of the National Mint,
captain-general and governor of Madeira, and
inspector-general of public works. He was the grandfather of Joaquim Augusto
Mouzinho de Albuquerque, a military officer and colonial
administrator.
Biography
Luís da Silva Mouzinho de Albuquerque was born in Lisbon on June
16, 1792, son of João Pedro Mouzinho de
Albuquerque (1736-1802) and Dona Luísa da Silva Gutiérrez de Ataíde
(1763-18??), both from noble families. His father was a Fidalgo-knight of the Royal
House and possessed two estates in Chelas. His mother was the
daughter of Luís da Silva de Ataíde, a senior-guard of the Leiria
pine forest and Lord of Casa do Terreiro.
Formative years and
marriage
Until he was seven years old, Mouzinho de Albuquerque was taught
by a French tutor. He showed an extraordinary precocious talent,
being very studious and fond of poetry, design and the physical
sciences. While still a child, Mouzinho composed several poems and
wrote a verse translation of Jean Racine's tragedy Andromaque. His
interest in natural science was the inspiration for his
entomological, mineralogical and chemical collections later in
life.
His father intended him to follow an ecclesiastical career and,
after his family moved to Leiria, Mouzinho started his theological
studies, attending Latin classes organised by Bishop Manuel de
Aguiar. He also entered the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem.
However, he soon recognized that he did not have the necessary
vocation for the sacerdotal life and, after his father's
death in 1802, he left the institute where his parents had enrolled
him.
Mouzinho opted for a military career, entering the Portuguese
Navy. He found obstacles to his career and soon transferred to
the Portuguese
Army, and became a cadet in the Royal Brigade. At the same
time, he started attending the Royal Naval Academy where he studied
mathematics, and was awarded a prize every year. He worked at the
Royal Observatory of Lisbon, as a portionist between 1813 and
1814.
He fell in love with his cousin, Ana Mascarenhas de Ataíde, who
was the daughter of his mother's sister and José Diogo Mascarenhas
Neto, head postmaster and alderman of the Lisbon City Senate.
Realising that he did not have the necessary means to make a
suitable marriage for her, he decided to abandon his studies and
dedicated himself to agriculture, with assistance from relatives,
the Tudela Castilho family, who lived in Fundão.
In 1814, he established himself in Santarém, then again in Fundão. He
returning to Lisbon to marry his cousin, returning to Fundão where
the couple lived until 1820, occupying themselves with
agriculture.
By this time he had written many poems, a tragedy, and his best
literary work: Geórgicas Portuguesas. He also collaborated
with the Jornal de Coimbra (Journal of Coimbra) and with
the Anais das Ciências e das Letras (Annals of the
Sciences and Letters), a Portuguese newspaper founded and edited by
his father-in-law, which was published in Paris.
Studies in
Paris and direction of the National Mint
In 1820, his father-in-law asked Mouzinho to come to him in
Paris, where he was exiled. Mouzinho immediately occupied himself
with editing the Annals of the Sciences and Letters.
Between 1821 and 1823, he published many articles under his name,
mainly about Portuguese agriculture and industrial affairs.
At that time, he also published a work about educational policy
with the title Ideas About the Establishment of the Public
Instruction, where he discussed the creation of a network of
parochial primary schools for both sexes and a network of municipal
secondary schools, a plan that would only come to fruition a
century later.
He remained in Paris for the next three years, attending public
courses and university laboratories of chemistry and physics, being
a student of Louis Nicolas Vauquelin
(1763-1829) and working in the laboratories of the Paris Botanical
Garden. He presented a work to the Institute of France concerning
simplification of the study of chemical analysis, which could be
considered a synoptic list of reactions. This work resulted in the
publication of a paper by two of the most prestigious scientists of
the time: Jean-Antoine Chaptal and Joseph-Louis Gay-Lussac. In 1822, Mouzinho
made an educational trip to Switzerland, returning to Portugal soon
after. In 1823, he was elected corresponding associate of the Royal
Academy of Sciences of Lisbon.
After the revolt of the Vilafrancada in 1823, absolutism once again
held sway in Portugal. Mouzinho's father-in-law introduced him to
Pedro de Sousa Holstein, the 1st Marquis of Palmela and minister, who
appointed him Superintendent of the National Mint (Casa da Moeda). This
position obliged him to give lectures in chemistry and physics in
the Mint's laboratory, a department created by a royal decree of
1801. In 1824, while working at this post, he wrote and published
an Elementary Course on Physics and Chemistry for students
of these subjects, the first work of its kind in Portugal. In the
same year he was elected to associate membership of the Royal
Academy of Sciences.
Soon after, he was nominated a member of the Weights and
Measures Commission and in 1825 was ordered by the government to
study and analyze the mineral waters of São Miguel
Island in the Azores. This
visit resulted in an interesting "memoir", published in Lisbon the
year after, that constituted the first scientific work published in
Portuguese on Azorean hydrogeology.
Exile in France, Brazil and the Azores and participation in the
struggles for liberalism
After joining the liberal cause and swearing fidelity to the
Constitutional Charter, Mouzinho departed for France. There he
learned of the absolutist revolution that had put Michael of Portugal into power. He remained
in France as a "liberal émigré" and soon as it was possible he
departed for Brazil where, together with Joaquim António de Aguiar,
the Count of Óbidos and the Count of Sabugal, he asked Peter I of Brazil (formerly Peter IV of
Portugal, and Michael’s brother) to support the cause of his
daughter, Princess Maria da Glória of Portugal, and
the Constitutional Charter.
He occupied the post of secretary to António
Severim de Noronha, who was at that time Count of Vila Flor and
later became Duke of Terceira, with whom he
established a relationship of political loyalty that would last
until his death. This relationship explains Mouzinho's political
ascendancy in the following years.
He departed from Brazil in 1829, going to Terceira in the
Azores, where he met the chiefs of the liberal resistance. Soon
after, in 1830, he was chosen for Secretary of State (a position
equivalent to Prime Minister) of the Regency in Angra.
It was in this post that he signed the famous Proclamation to
the Portuguese dated March 20, 1830. He served the liberal
cause assiduously, being a member of the commission that in 1831
traveled to London in the name
of the Regency which obtained credits that made possible the
survival of the liberal cause in the Azores.
On his return to Terceira, he asked to be relieved of the
political tasks of his posts so he could participate as officer in
the Armed Forces and as right-hand man to the Count of Vila Flor in
the expeditions to São Jorge Island and Faial Island. In this
position, he took part in the Battle of Ladeira do Gato. Having
served in the highest posts during the liberal wars, he never
wanted to be paid more than a subaltern, which was his official rank.
Expedition
to Madeira
Dom Pedro arrived in Terceira and assumed power that had until
then been held by the Regency. He then appointed Mouzinho de
Albuquerque to the post of captain-general of Madeira, even though
the island was still in the hands of the absolutists. To take
charge of his post, Mouzinho left from Terceira on board the
frigate D. Maria II, as part of an expedition led by Admiral George Rose Sartorius intended to force the
surrender of Funchal.
Besides Mouzinho, Januário Vicente Camacho, the deacon of the
See of Funchal and other constitutionalists took part. However,
Sartorius had to retire because the actual defences of Madeira were
much stronger than what was previously believed, and he had
insufficient forces for a landing. Because the nearby Porto Santo
Island had been occupied on April 4, 1832, by a
constitutionalist force with 60 artillery pieces, which had arrived
from Terceira in the ships Conde de Vila Flor and Terceira,
Mouzinho went there on April 7 and decided to wait there for the
right moment to conquer Madeira.
Installed in Porto Santo, Mouzinho was in an awkward situation,
where he was neither able to conquer Madeira nor suffer an attack
from the major island. He had to wait some time before another ship
came from the Azores. During this wait, some ships were captured
and their cargo used as supplies for the island's inhabitants, who
were suffering famine because the previous year's harvest in the
island had been poor and supplies from Madeira were being blocked.
Calm and order were present in Porto Santo during the occupation,
due to the discipline of Mouzinho de Albuquerque's troops and the
excellent control of him and his officers. While in Porto Santo he
also wrote a poem, "Ruy, o Escudeiro", which he published
many years later.
Upon its arrival on May 5, 1832, a constitutionalist ship
allowed him to escape his awkward position using it to return to
Terceira. He took with him 104 volunteers who had escaped Madeira
to enlist in the constitutional army and in Terceira they joined
forces that were being prepared for a major attack on continental
Portugal.
Final years of the civil
war
Along with the forces whom he returned to join, Mouzinho took
part in the Mindelo landing and the siege of Porto, where he served
brilliantly as a military officer and statesman. On July 29, 1832,
he replaced Pedro de Sousa Holstein, Marquis of Palmela, and
occupied the post of interim Minister of the Kingdom, a position he
held until September 25 of that year, when Sousa Holstein reassumed
the post.
During the regency of D. Pedro in Porto, he was once more
Minister of the Kingdom, this time in a titular capacity only, from
November 10, 1832. The political instability resulting from the war
and conflicts within liberals, curtailed tenure of ministries, and
a few weeks after he had taken power, Mouzinho was replaced by Bernardo de Sá Nogueira de Figueiredo, the
future Marquis of Sá
da Bandeira. However, Mouzinho continued to be a major figure
trusted by Prince Regent Pedro, collaborating with his regency
governments.
Being a supporter of António Severim de Noronha, future Duke of
Terceira, to whom he was devoted and for whom he held the utmost
respect, Mouzinho advised him to start a campaign from the south
(Algarve) and accompanied
him, becoming part of his general staff until the end of the civil
war.
Prefecture
in Madeira
In 1834, following the Convention of Évora-Monte, Mouzinho de
Albuquerque returned to Madeira to occupy the position he had
previously been appointed to two years earlier, not as
captain-general, a post liberalism had abolished, but as prefect of the new-born
Prefecture of Funchal.
He was nominated by a royal decree of June 30, 1834, having
taken office on August 6 of the same year. His administration was
short, as he left the post on September 30, 1835, departing to
Lisbon on November 11 with a promise of the Governorship of Portuguese
India. This did not come to pass because he was nominated
Minister of the Kingdom in the government of José Jorge
Loureiro.
His administration in Madeira, characterized by a "great
impartiality and justice", resulted in numerous improvements,
namely in education, with the creation of schools, and in public
assistance and with the construction of roads.
A consequence of his experience in Madeira were the studies that
he would publish in 1837 about the archipelago's geology
(Observation to serve the geological history of the islands of
Madeira, Porto Santo and Desertas), as well as a text—perhaps
one of the first works about Madeiran autonomy, as seen from an
outsider's point of view—about the government of that Portuguese
territory.
Political connections established in Madeira made possible for
him to be elected by that constituency in the parliamentary
election of August 12, 1838 (3rd legislature).
Initial period
of the constitutional monarchy
After his appointment as governor of Portuguese India fell
through, he was named Minister of the Kingdom in the government of
José Jorge Loureiro. He occupied the post between November 25, 1835
and April 20, 1836. When the government collapsed on this date,
Mouzinho, apparently disillusioned with politics, retired from
active politics and returned to Paris, where he acquired a small
estate. He later returned to Portugal and occupied himself with
agriculture and his family.
In 1836, the government sent him as a military engineer to the
Central Division of Public Works. However, he could not do much for
the public improvement of the country since public funds available
were low, and soon afterwards the September Revolution started.
When the reaction to Septembrism started in 1837, Mouzinho de
Albuquerque, loyal to his friend the Duke of Terceira, took part in
the so called Revolt of the Marshals. As a consequence, he became
involved in the combat of Chão da Freira, and he was among the
defeated. After the definitive crushing of the revolt he was forced
into exile, together with the marshal's troops and with other
officers involved. He went to Spain and then to Paris, where,
together with the Duke of Palmela, the
Duke of Saldanha and the Duke
of Terceira, he wrote an open letter to the Portuguese congress
defending the constitutional charter.
When peace was signed and the Portuguese Constitution of 1838
established, Mouzinho swore to uphold it in August 1839. A few days
later, he was again named general inspector of public works in the
Central Division. In March 1840, he became inspector-general of
Public Construction Service of the Kingdom and appointed to reform
this service. He occupied this post until 1843 in spite of being
asked again to fill the post of governor of Portuguese India in
June 1840, which he declined.
From time to time during this period he added other duties of a
political character to his position of Inspector-General. He wrote
several texts, including a technical guide to the building of
masonry bridges, intended for engineers of his time and offered for
publication to the Royal Academy of Sciences. He also presented
several reports and plans on the constructions of the service over
which he presided, namely the Fort of Porto, the canal in Azambuja and the restoration
of the Monastery of Batalha, concerning which he
published an interesting technical work.
Entering active politics again, he was elected to the parliament
in many legislatures. When António Bernardo da Costa Cabral
promulgated the restoration of the Constitutional Charter in Porto,
he was once again Minister of the Kingdom and the interim Minister
of Justice in the government of the Duke of Terceira, continuing in
that post for 9-20 February 1842.
Although he was a chartist, he opposed the more reactionary
factions that were arising at that time, maintaining that the
restoration of the Charter should be made in a legitimate and
correct manner, and calling for a constituent Cortes to undo the
work of the Constituent Congress of 1838. The restorers did not
want that, and after being insulted by the cabralists, Mouzinho
resigned on February 24, 15 days after the government took office,
being replaced by Costa Cabral. After his resignation, he started
to sit in the parliamentary opposition benches.
A year later, he was dismissed from his post of
Inspector-General of public construction. His parliamentary life
from 1842 to 1844 was considered brilliant. He then accepted
management of works on Porto's river fort that a construction
company had started. He had just contributed a plan, but the
company then folded. After this, he was director of the works on
the Azambuja canal, and having lost his seat in the Parliament in
the election of 1845, he went to a farm of his in Leiria, occupying
himself with his family.
Return
to government and death during the Patuleia revolt
When the Revolution of Maria da
Fonte, which started in Minho region in
April and May 1846, forced Queen Maria II of Portugal to dismiss
the government led by António Bernardo da Costa Cabral, she chose
the Duke of Palmela to form a new one. Although in the beginning of
May, Mouzinho had been named civil governor of the District of Leiria, a post he would never
occupy de facto, he was appointed to the Ministry of the
Navy, and occupied it only during 23-26 May, 1846 because he was
transferred to the Ministry of the Kingdom, a position he retained
until the fall of the government.
With the palace coup d'état known as the Ambush on October 6 of
that year, the government was dismissed summarily, which provoked
the generalized revolt of the enemies of cabralism and led to the
constitution of the Porto Junta. Mouzinho was among the insurgents,
supporting septembrism. With civil war unleashed, he was active in
the Patuleia, allied with
the Marquess of Sá da Bandeira and the Count of Lavradio.
At that time, he was a colonel and accompanied the division commanded
by General José Travassos
Valdez, 1st Count of Bonfim when he occupied Torres Vedras. He
was placed in command of the old fort of the town, actively
participating in its defence. During the battle, fought on December
23, he was seriously wounded and died four days later on December
27, 1846.
Luís da Silva Mouzinho de Albuquerque was Royal House Fidalgo,
of Her Majesty's Council, knight of the Order of Saint John of
Jerusalem, great-cross of the Order of
the Immaculate Conception of Vila Viçosa and bearer of the Order of the Tower and
Sword. He was an associate of different national and
international scientific associations, including the Royal Academy of Sciences of
Lisbon and the prestigious Institut de France.
Five children were born from his marriage with Ana Mascarenhas
de Ataíde:
- Fernando Luís Mouzinho de Albuquerque, national deputy
contributing to Portuguese political and military life
- Isabel Gabriela Mouzinho de Albuquerque
- José Diogo Mascarenhas Mouzinho de Albuquerque, military
officer who participated with his father in the Patuleia, and
father of Joaquim Augusto Mouzinho de Albuquerque, a hero of the
colonial wars of the 19th century, responsible for the capture of
Gungunhana
- Maria Luísa Joana Mouzinho de Albuquerque
- Luísa Henriqueta Isabel Longuinha Mouzinho de Albuquerque
Published
works
- Ideas about the Establishment of Public Instruction,
dedicated to the Portuguese nation, and Offered to its
Representatives, Paris, 1823
- Elementary Course on Physics and Chemistry, Lisbon,
1824
- Observations about São Miguel Island Collected by the
Commission Sent to Same Island in August 1825, Having Returned in
October of the Same Year, by Luiz da Silva Mousinho de Albuquerque
and his assistant Ignacio Pitta de Castro Menezes, Lisbon,
Royal Press, 1826 (republished in a facsimile version by
the Municipal Chamber of Povoação, Açores,
1989)
- Observations to Serve the Geological History of the Islands
of Madeira, Porto Santo and Desertas, with the Geognostic
Description of the Same Islands, in volume XII, part I, of
Memories of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Lisbon
- Brief Exposition of the Effort Tried in Favour of the
Constitutional Charter in Portugal, in the Months from July to
October 1837, edited in Pontevedra and then in Lisbon, 1837
- Report of the Minister and Secretary of State of the
Kingdom Affairs, presented to the Cortes in 1836, Lisbon,
1836
- Report of the Public Constructions of the Kingdom, by the
Inspector-General, Lisbon, 1840
- General Report on Public Construction in the Kingdom, by
the Inspector, etc., presented on 8 July 1840, Lisbon,
1840
- Report of the Inspection on the Internal Works and
Communications in the Kingdom Districts North of the Tagus river,
Performed in October and November 1842 by the Inspector,
Lisbon, 1843
- Engineer's Guide to Stone Bridge Building, Lisbon,
1840
- Inedict Memoir on the Monumental Building of Batalha,
Leiria, 1854
- Portuguese Georgics, (dedicated to his wife Ana
Mascarenhas de Ataíde), Paris, 1820
- The Glory of the Conquests, (poemette) published by
the Journal of Coimbra, volume XIV
- The Day (poem) 1813, with a second edition, Lisbon,
1825;
References
- Luís da Silva Mousinho de Albuquerque, Almeida
Araújo, Francisco Duarte de, in Ilustração Popular, nr.
33, Lisbon, 1866, retrieved from http://purl.pt/5993/1/P2.html
- Pereira, Isabel (coordinator); Pinheiro Marques, Alfredo;
Cardoso, Ana Paula; Luís de Albuquerque: o homem e a obra
(Luís de Albuquerque: the man and his work); illustrated cathalogue
organized by the Cultural Services of the Municipal Chamber of
Figueira da Foz; Figueira da Foz, 1993
- Mouzinho de Albuquerque, Joaquim; Mousinho de
Albuquerque, in Coninbricense, nrs. 3975 and 3976,
from 26 to 29 September 1885
- Oliveira Pimentel, Júlio Máximo; Elogio Histórico do Sócio
efectivo Luís da Silva Mousinho de Albuquerque recitado na sessão
pública da Academica de Ciências... (Historical praise of the
effective associate Luís da Silva Mousinho de Albuquerque recited
in public session of the Academy of Sciences...), Lisbon, 1856
- Pinheiro, Magda; Mouzinho de Albuquerque, um intellectual
na Revolução (Mouzinho de Albuquerque, an intellectual inside
the Revolution), Lisbon, Editora Quetzal, 1993
- Sanches de Baêna, Miguel; Mouzinho de Albuquerque: a última
batalhas (Mouzinho de Albuqueruque: the last battle), Dir.
António Reis, Lisbon, Alfa, cop. 1990
External
links