Conservative Party (Brazil)

Conservative Party
Partido Conservador
LeaderJoão Maurício Vanderlei (last)
Founders
Founded1836 (1836)
Registered1837[4]
Dissolved15 November 1889 (1889-11-15)
Preceded byRestorationist Party
Succeeded byMinas Republican Party
HeadquartersRio de Janeiro (NM)
Newspaper
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing
ReligionRoman Catholicism[12]
Colors  Green
Members nicknameSaquaremas[13]

The Conservative Party (Portuguese: Partido Conservador) was a Brazilian political party of the imperial period, which was formed c. 1836 and ended with the proclamation of the Republic in 1889. This party arose mostly from a dissident wing of the Moderate Party (Partido Moderado) and from some of the members of the Restorationist Party (Partido Restaurador) in the 1830s when it became known as the Reactionary Party (Partido Regressista). In the early 1840s it called itself the Party of Order (Partido de Ordem) to distinguish itself from the liberal opposition, which they accused of disorder and anarchy, and both the party members and its leadership were known as "saquaremas" after the village of Saquarema, where the leadership had plantations and support.[14] In the mid-1850s, it was finally known as the Conservative Party.

  1. ^ Needell 2006, p. 193
  2. ^ Universidade Federal de Campina Grande. "Bernardo Pereira de Vasconcelos". Archived from the original on 2015-11-22.
  3. ^ Prefeitura de Itaboraí. "Prédios Históricos".
  4. ^ a b c Brasiliense A. (1878). Os programas dos partidos políticos e o Segundo Império. São Paulo: Tipografia de Jorge Seckler. pp. 11–13.
  5. ^ ":::[ DocPro ]:::". memoria.bn.br.
  6. ^ Biblioteca Nacional Digital Brasil: Fundação Biblioteca Nacional. "A Província de Minas".
  7. ^ http://www.sapientia.pucsp.br/tde_arquivos/3/TDE-2007-05-08T13:25:41Z-3073/Publico/Angela%20Thalassa.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ Garschagen, Bruno (2017-02-15). "História e Tradição do Conservadorismo Brasileiro". Gazeta do Povo. Retrieved 2017-04-29.
  9. ^ Lynch, Christian Edward Cyril (2011). Saquaremas e luzias: a sociologia do desgosto com o Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Insight Inteligência. pp. 21–37.
  10. ^ Torres, João Camilo de Oliveira (1964). Democracia Coroada - Teoria Política do Império do Brasil. Petrópolis: Vozes Limitada. pp. 211–220.
  11. ^ Jeffrey D. Needell, The Party of Order: The Conservatives, the State, and Slavery in the Brazilian Monarchy, 1831–1871 (Stanford University Press, 2006: ISBN 0-8047-5369-5), p. 110.
  12. ^ "Constituição Imperial de 1824" (PDF). pp. 1 e 3.
  13. ^ BrevesCafé. "Os partidos Conservador e Liberal".
  14. ^ Jeffrey D. Needell, The Party of Order: The Conservatives, the State, and Slavery in the Brazilian Monarchy, 1831-1871 (Stanford University Press, 2006: ISBN 0-8047-5369-5), p. 110.

Developed by StudentB