Diogo Antônio Feijó | |
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Personal details | |
Born | 10 August 1784 São Paulo, Empire of Brazil |
Died | 10 November 1843 (aged 59) São Paulo, Empire of Brazil |
Diogo Antônio Feijó (São Paulo, 10 August 1784 – São Paulo, 10 November 1843) was a Brazilian politician and catholic priest. He was the Regent of the Empire of Brazil from October 1835 to September 1837. Beside members of the Imperial family, he was the first to ever hold this position alone; the other was his appointed successor after his resignation, the Marquis of Olinda. Both were regends at the time Emperor Dom Pedro II was still a minor.
He received his early education in a clerical college of São Paulo. In 1807 he was ordained priest, and soon afterward began to teach in Parahyba.
In 1820 the constitutional revolution triumphed in Portugal, and Feijó was sent as a representative from the province of São Paulo to the Portuguese assembly (Portuguese: Cortes) in Lisbon, to which he was admitted 11 February 1822. On 25 April, he made an eloquent speech in defense of Brazilian rights, which were threatened by the Portuguese majority. The Brazilian deputies were unsuccessful, and Feijó, with five others, left Lisboa secretly for Falmouth, where, on 22 October 1822, they published a manifesto explaining their conduct. Feijó afterward returned to Brazil, and retired to Itu.
In 1824 Dom Pedro I submitted a proposed constitution to the municipalities of the empire, which was almost unanimously accepted, except at Itu, where Feijó proposed to amend it. The province of São Paulo elected him successively to the legislatures of 1826-29 and 1830-33. In 1827 he proposed the abolition of clerical celibacy, and in 1828 submitted a project for the reform of municipalities.