Holland House and Portugal, 1793–1840

Holland House and Portugal, 1793–1840

English Whiggery and the Constitutional Cause in Iberia

By Jose Baptista de Sousa

‘Holland House and Portugal’, a study in political and diplomatic history, focusses on the relations between Lord Holland and Portugal from 1793 to 1840. The book traces the evolution of Holland’s views on Portugal from the time of his first visit to Spain to his later contribution to the establishment of a constitutional regime in Portugal.

Hardback, 250 Pages

ISBN:9781783087563

February 2018

£70.00, $115.00

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About This Book

‘Holland House and Portugal’, a study in political and diplomatic history, focuses on the relations between Lord Holland and Portugal from 1793 to 1840. The book traces the evolution of Holland’s views on Portugal from the time of his first visit to Spain to his later contribution to the establishment of a constitutional regime in Portugal. It pays particular attention to the Hollands’ visits to Portugal in 1804–5 and 1808–9. On their travels, they met a number of prominent Portuguese, notably Palmela, who were to remain in contact with Holland House for many years. The Portuguese journeys and the continuing contact with people like Palmela were to play an important part in the development of Lord Holland’s views, not only on Portugal but also on broader political and constitutional issues.

Thus ‘Holland House and Portugal’ investigates Lord Holland’s influence on the establishment of a constitutional regime in Spain in 1809–10 and – indirectly and unintentionally – in Portugal in 1820–23. It includes a study of Holland’s contribution to the creation of a government in Brazil in 1808 – when the Braganças moved from Portugal to Rio de Janeiro – and his indirect influence on the establishment of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves in 1815.

Lord Holland’s contribution to the establishment of a Liberal regime in Portugal in 1834 is examined at some length in ‘Holland House and Portugal’. The book includes a study of the extent of Holland’s support for the Portuguese Liberal Cause after Dom Miguel’s usurpation of the throne in 1828 and of his subsequent role in the ‘Liberal invasion’ of Portugal. To this end it investigates relations between Portuguese émigrés and the Holland House Circle, and Holland’s role in the triangular diplomacy between Lisbon, St James and South Audley Street in 1828 and later. Finally, it considers Holland’s contribution to the end of the Portuguese Civil War in 1834 and to the subsequent establishment of a constitutional regime in that country.

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Author Information

José Baptista de Sousa, historian and essayist, is the author of several studies on the history of Anglo-Portuguese political and cultural relations.

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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Foreword by John Clarke; Foreword by Maria Leonor Machado de Sousa; Preface; List of Abbreviations; Introduction: A Long-Lasting Relation; Part 1. Champion of Liberties; Chapter One First Impressions; Chapter Two Renewed Acquaintance; Chapter Three La Grande Affaire: The Hollands’ Influence on the Spanish Liberalism; Chapter Four Glimpses of Liberty; Part 2. The Portuguese Question; Chapter Five Road to Absolutism; Chapter Six Super Flumina Babylonis; Chapter Seven The Affair of Terceira; Chapter Eight The Affairs of Portugal; Chapter Nine The Return of the Whigs; Chapter Ten Pedro’s ‘Argonauts’; Chapter Eleven Boulevard of Freedom; Part 3. Aftermath; Chapter Twelve Revolution; Chapter Thirteen Liberalism and Its Problems; Bibliography; Index.

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