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5th October 1910 revolution

5 October 1910 Revolution
Estremoz13.jpg
Contemporary commemorative illustration of the Proclamation of the Portuguese Republic on 5 October 1910.
Date 3 – 5 October 1910
Location Portugal
Result

Republican victory

  • Abolition of the monarchy and proclamation of the republic.
  • King Manuel II is exiled and flees to Britain.
Belligerents
Kingdom of Portugal Kingdom of Portugal Portugal Portuguese republicans
Commanders and leaders
Kingdom of Portugal King Manuel II
Kingdom of Portugal Teixeira de Sousa
Kingdom of Portugal Paiva Couceiro
Portugal Teófilo Braga
Portugal Afonso Costa
Portugal Manuel de Arriaga
Portugal José Relvas
Strength
About 7,000 men About 2,000 revolutionaries
3 cruisers
Casualties and losses
At least 37 dead and dozens wounded, with at least 14 of them dying in the following days.

Republican victory

The establishment of the Portuguese Republic was the result of a coup d'état organised by the Portuguese Republican Party which, on 5 October 1910, deposed the constitutional monarchy and established a republican regime in Portugal. The subjugation of the country to British colonial interests, the royal family's expenses, the power of the Church, the political and social instability, the system of alternating power of the two political parties (Progressive and Regenerador), João Franco's dictatorship, an apparent inability to adapt to modern times – all contributed to an unrelenting erosion of the Portuguese monarchy. The proponents of the republic, particularly the Republican Party, found ways to take advantage of the situation. The Republican Party presented itself as the only one that had a programme that was capable of returning to the country its lost status and place Portugal on the way of progress.

After a reluctance of the military to combat the nearly two thousand soldiers and sailors that rebelled between 3 and 4 October 1910, the Republic was proclaimed at 9 o'clock of the next day from the balcony of the Paços do Concelho in Lisbon. After the revolution, a provisional government led by Teófilo Braga directed the fate of the country until the approval of the Constitution in 1911 that marked the beginning of the First Republic. Among other things, with the establishment of the republic, national symbols were changed: the national anthem and the flag. The revolution produced some civil and religious liberties, although there was no advance in women's rights and in workers rights, unlike what happened in other European countries.


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