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The Brazilian Armed Forces and the Overthrow of the Monarchy: Another Perspective
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
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In mid-November of 1889, elements of the armed forces stationed in Rio de Janeiro formally overthrew the Brazilian monarchy. Analyses of these events always include the discontent of the army as one of the major factors in the downfall of the empire, along with the disillusionment of the planters following the abolition of slavery without compensation, the gradual acceptance of the inevitability of a republic by Brazil's political elite, and the “religious question,” that is, the conflict between secularism and ultramontanism in the 1870's. Many of the older studies of these events, such as Oliveira Vianna's, stress the armed forces as the major factor in the downfall of the empire; however, several more recent works, for example, that of José Maria Bello, relegate the officers to a far less important role. In this article, both these views will be considered, and then the composition and activities of the Brazilian armed forces will be examined in greater detail.
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References
1 Vianna, F.J. Oliveira, O occaso do império (São Paulo, 1925)Google Scholar; Bello, José Maria, História da república (1889–1954) 4th ed. (São Paulo, 1959).Google Scholar
Other useful accounts of the overthrow of the monarchy include Otôni, Christiano Benedicto, O advento da república no Brasil (Rio de Janeiro, 1890),Google Scholar and Lyra, Heitor, História da queda do império 2 vols. (São Paulo, 1964).Google Scholar The traditional account in English is that by Martin, Percy Alvin, “Causes of the Collapse of the Brazilian Empire,” Hispanic American Historical Review, 4 (Feb. 1921), 4–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar A much more recent analysis is that by Boehrer, George C. A., “The Brazilian Republican Revolution: Old and New Ideas,” Luso-Brazilian Review, 3 (Winter, 1966), 43–57.Google Scholar Also of interest are “Sobre as origens da República,” Anais do Museu Taulista, XVIII (1964), 63–120, and “A proclamação da República,” Anais do Museu Pontista, XIX (1965), 169–207, by Emilia Viotti da Costa.
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