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- <text id=93CT1828>
- <title>
- Portugal--History
- </title>
- <history>
- Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
- Europe
- Portugal
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>CIA World Factbook</source>
- <hdr>
- History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> 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.
- </p>
- <p> 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).
- </p>
- <p> 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.
- </p>
- <p> 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 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. It was a
- charter member of NATO, joining in 1949.
- </p>
- <p> 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.
- </p>
- <p> 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.
- </p>
- <p> Gen. Antonio de Spinola was installed as president after the
- coup but resigned in September 1974 to protest the growing power
- exercised by communist and leftist forces. He was replaced by
- another general, Francisco da Costa Gomes, who retained a
- procommunist, Gen. Vasco dos Santos Goncalves, as prime
- minister. On March 11, 1975, a rebellion by rightist military
- officers failed, and former President Spinola fled the country.
- </p>
- <p> On April 25 (now Portugal's national day), the first
- anniversary of the 1974 coup, Portuguese voters chose a
- Constituent Assembly to draft a constitution. The vote gave an
- overwhelming majority of 72% to candidates of three democratic
- political parties: the Socialists (PS), Popular Democrats (which
- later changed its name to Social Democrats--PSD), and Center
- Social Democrats (CDS).
- </p>
- <p> The communists and their allies in the Armed Forces Movement
- attempted to play down their relative lack of popular support
- (the Communist Party won only 12.5% of the vote) by tightening
- their hold on the provisional government and by seeking to
- diminish sharply the role of political parties.
- </p>
- <p> Goncalves resigned under mounting civilian and military
- pressure, and a new provisional government (the sixth since
- April 1974) took office in September 1975, led by Adm. Jose
- Pinheiro de Azevedo.
- </p>
- <p> The political tug-of-war continued until November 25, when
- left-wing military elements seized control of several strategic
- military bases, only to surrender peacefully the next day after a
- determined show of force by loyal units under the direction of
- Lt. Col. Antonio Ramalho Eanes.
- </p>
- <p> Portugal's new constitution took effect on April 25, 1976,
- when elections for a parliamentary Assembly of the Republic also
- were held. In June, Eanes was elected president with 62% of the
- vote after gaining the support of the three major democratic
- parties. He chose Mario Soares, whose Socialist Party had won
- a plurality in the parliamentary elections, to serve as prime
- minister of Portugal's first democratic government since the
- 1920s.
- </p>
- <p> Soares' minority socialist government fell in December 1977
- and was followed by a succession of short-lived coalition and
- minority governments. In the July 1987 parliamentary elections,
- PSD leader Cavaco Silva led his party to a stunning victory,
- resulting in the first absolute majority for a single party. The
- PSD received a slight majority (just over 50%) of the popular
- vote but won 148 of the then-250 seats in parliament. Mario
- Soares, who had been elected president in February 1986,
- consequently invited Prime Minister Cavaco Silva to form a
- government, the first that appeared likely to complete its
- 4-year term since the 1974 revolution.
- </p>
- <p> Since entering office, the Cavaco Silva government has
- implemented economic and social reforms intended to put Portugal
- on a more competitive footing with its European partners. The
- government and the Socialist Party also cooperated in the
- assembly to eliminate Marxist rhetoric from the constitution and
- to pave the way for full privatization of public sector
- enterprises. In the June 18, 1989, European Parliamentary
- elections, the ruling Social Democratic Party won 32.5% of the
- vote (vice 37% in 1987). The socialists increased their vote to
- 28.5%. Nearly half of the registered voters stayed away from the
- polls.
- </p>
- <p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, May
- 1990.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-