Harman Patil (Editor)

Belfastada

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Belfastada is the name given to the military uprising against the Miguelist regime in Portugal that was triggered off in 1828 from the port with the landing of a group of liberal exiles coming in from England aboard the Belfast ship (hence the name given to the event).

This liberal offensive was unsuccessful, so the Liberals were forced to take refuge on the ship and go back to England.

The Liberal Wars (1828–34)

This is part of the Liberal Wars in Portugal.

After the Napoleonic War, the British ruled Portugal in the name of the absent king who was in Brazil, with Beresford as the de facto Regent, until the Liberal Revolution of 1820 when they were driven out and the king was forced to return as a constitutional monarch.

Over the next 25 years the fledgling Portuguese democracy experienced several military upheavals, especially the Liberal Wars fought between the brothers Dom Pedro, ex-Emperor of Brazil and the absolutist usurper Dom Miguel.

To assert the cause of the rightful Queen, his daughter Maria da Glória, Pedro sailed from Terceira in the Azores with an expeditionary force consisting of 60 vessels, 7500 men including António Severin de Noronha, Count of Vila Flor, Alexandre Herculano, Almeida Garrett, Joaquim António de Aguiar, José Travassos Valdez and a volunteer British contingent under the command of Colonels George Lloyd Hodges and Charles Shaw and effected a landing at Mindelo on the shores north of Porto. On 9 July Porto was taken by the liberal forces, and after an inconclusive result at the Battle of Ponte Ferreira on 22–23 July were besieged in the city by the Miguelites for nearly a year until, in July 1833, the Duke of Terceira (as Vila Flor had now been created) was able to land in the Algarve and defeat Miguel's forces at the battle of Almada.

Meanwhile, Miguel's fleet was comprehensively defeated by Pedro's much smaller squadron, commanded by Charles Napier, in the fourth Battle of Cape St. Vincent (1833).

The Miguelites were driven out of Lisbon but returned and attacked the city in force, unsuccessfully. Miguel was finally defeated at the Battle of Asseiceira, on 16 May 1834, and capitulated a few days later with the Concession of Evoramonte.

He was exiled, though his supporters continued to plot for his return and cause trouble up to the 1850s.

* Liberal revolt in Porto (1828) * ''Belfastada'' (1828) * Revolt of the Royal Navy Brigade (1829) * Revolt of Lisbon (1831) * Revolt of the 2nd Infantry Regiment (1831) * Siege of Porto and civil war (1832–33)

References

Belfastada Wikipedia