José Hipólito Raposo (13 February 1885 in São Vicente da Beira – 26 August 1953) was a Portuguese politician, writer, lawyer and historian.
He was educated at the University of Coimbra before taking up practice as a lawyer. Part of a conservative monarchist group active within the intelligetsia at the time in 1911 he took a trip to Paris with his friend Alberto Monsaraz and whilst there they established contact with Action Française with whom they shared many aims. He joined with Monsaraz, António Sardinha, João do Amaral and José Adriano Pequito Rebelo in relaunching the monarchist journal A Nação Portuguesa in 1913. From this basis he became the founder of Integralismo Lusitano that same year along with Monsaraz and Sardinha. Raposo became known as one of the main ideologues of the new group and as a theorist he had a deep influence on Plínio Salgado who frequently referenced his works.
In the early 1920s Raposo also became close to a minor group known as Cruzada Non'Alvares, which was the first group in Portugal to openly endorse Benito Mussolini and Italian fascism. Like others in the Integralist movement Raposo also keenly watched the development Movimento Nacional-Sindicalista but, although he personally had some sympathies towards the cause of national syndicalism, he did not follow the likes of Monsaraz in switching to the new movement. However despite his flirtations with fascism Raposo, unlike Sardinha, had no truck with the racialist theories associated with Nazism and similar ideologies and indeed considered the Black African populations of colonies such as Portuguese Angola and Portuguese Mozambique to be as much Portuguese as himself.