José I (king of Portugal, 1750-77) dies …

Years: 1684 - 1827

José I (king of Portugal, 1750-77) dies in February 1777, and with him goes Pombal's hold on power and his common sense approach of encouraging industrial development.

Pombal's successor as secretary of state for overseas dominions, Martinho de Melo e Castro, is alarmed that the nascent Brazilian factories could make the colony independent and warns that "Portugal without Brazil is an insignificant power."

In January 1785, he orders that they all be "closed and abolished."

Brazilian students at Coimbra in the early 1780s, had pledged themselves to seek independence.

They are influenced greatly by the success of the North American British colonies in forming the United States of America.

In 1786 and 1787, Jose Joaquim Maia e Barbalho of Rio de Janeiro, a Coimbra graduate studying medicine at Montpelier and a critic of the colonial relationship, approaches Ambassador Thomas Jefferson in France.

He tells Jefferson that the students intend to break with Portugal and requests the aid of the United States.

One of the Coimbra graduates is Jose Bonifacio de Andrada e Silva, the patriarch of Brazilian independence.

The failed Minas Conspiracy (Inconfidencia Mineira) of 1789 involves some of the leading figures of the captaincy: tax collectors, priests, military officers, judges, government officials, and mine owners and landowners.

Some had been born in Portugal, several had had their early education with the Jesuits and later studied at Coimbra, a number write poetry that is still read and studied, but what they have most in common are financial problems caused by crown policies that require them to pay their debts, or that cut them out of lucrative gold and diamond contraband trade.

They argue that Brazil has all it needs to survive and prosper and that Portugal is a parasite.

They pledge to lift restrictions on mining; exploit iron ore; set up factories; create a university, a citizens' militia, and a Parliament; pardon debts to the royal treasury; free slaves born in Brazil; and form a union with São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro similar to that of the United States.

The history of the Minas Conspiracy is full of heavy drama.

Revelation of the conspiracy turns brothers, friends, clients, and patrons against each other in an unseemly scramble to escape punishment.

In one sense, the affair foreshadows the nature of future Brazilian revolutionary movements in that it is a conspiracy of oligarchs seeking their own advantage, while claiming to act for the people.

In the end, Lisbon decides to make an example of only one person, a low-ranked second lieutenant (alferes) of the Royal Mineiro Dragoons named Joaquim Jose da Silva Xavier ("Tiradentes").

His execution in 1792 in Rio de Janeiro might well have been forgotten if the nineteenth-century republicans had not embraced him as a symbolic counterpoise to Dom Pedro I, who declares Brazilian independence from Portugal in 1822.

Later, with the establishment of the republic in 1889, every town and city in Brazil will build a Tiradentes square, and the day of his execution, April 21, will become a well-commemorated national holiday.

Nonetheless, because the Minas Conspiracy is marked more by skulduggery than nobility and clarity, its value as a national symbol requires selective interpretation and presentation.

Portugal resolves to watch Brazilians more carefully and reacts forcefully to a nonexistent but suspected plot in Rio de Janeiro in 1794, and to a real, mulatto-led one in Bahia in 1798.

Meanwhile, the French Revolution, the resulting slave rebellion in Haiti, and the fear of similar revolts in Brazil persuades the Brazilian elites that the dream of a United States-style conservative revolution that will leave the slave-based socioeconomic structure intact and in their hands is impossible.

The crown separates the residents of Minas Gerais from the revived coastal sugar producers through policies that set their interests at odds.

Lisbon diverts Brazilian nationalism with greater imperial involvement.

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