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Toda a História do Império Português

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    This is a map
    of the world's shipping lanes
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    showcasing the intricate network
    of maritime routes
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    that connect our modern world
    through global trade.
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    Although some of these routes
    were established in more recent times
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    such as the Suez and Panama canals,
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    most of these oceanic highways
    were chartered long ago
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    in an age where there was
    no reliable way of navigation
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    other than local knowledge
    and some rudimentary maps.
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    However, just over 500 years ago
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    at the beginning of the 16th century
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    these international trade routes
    did not even exist.
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    Only due to the emergence
    of the small Iberian nation of Portugal
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    as a maritime superpower,
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    were these connections
    to other parts of the world
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    made possible through their daring
    voyages and navigational prowess.
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    Portugal quickly established
    an empire for itself,
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    stretching from Africa, to Asia
    and South America.
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    These maritime exploits
    not only fueled Portugal's wealth.
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    an astonishing rise to power,
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    but also laid the foundation
    for the interconnected global economy
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    that we benefit from today.
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    But how did this relatively obscure nation
    on the edge of Europe emerged
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    to forge an Empire that would shape
    the course of History
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    for centuries to come?
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    This is the History
    of the Portuguese Empire.
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    All of our videos are available to watch
    ad free over on our substack page.
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    you can also read along
    to the original scripts
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    as well as listen to the audio generation
    as podcasts
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    by following the link
    in the video description below
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    and subscribing with your email.
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    Thank you.
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    The kingdom of Portugal emerged out
    of the series of events
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    known to History as the Reconquista
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    which was the the gradual reconquest
    of Christian lands
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    on the Iberian Peninsula
    from the Muslim Moors
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    who had invaded the territory
    far back in the 8th century,
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    having established itself
    as a sovereign kingdom
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    by the middle of the 12th century,
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    the Portuguese went on to push
    out the remaining Moors to the South
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    by capturing the territory
    of the Algarve in 1249,
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    effectively setting out the borders
    of their kingdom
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    along the same lines
    to which they exist today.
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    With their own territory secured
    from external threats
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    and the possibility of further expansion
    on the Iberian Peninsula ruled out
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    on account of their friendly relations
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    with the neighboring Christian
    kingdom of Castile to the east.
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    Portugal turned its attention
    towards the sea
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    and the possibility
    of exerting its own influence
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    upon both it and the lands
    that lay beyond in North Africa.
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    The year 1415 marked a pivotal
    moment in Portuguese expansion
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    for a decision was made to orchestrate
    an attack on the city of Ceuta,
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    which was held by the Marinid Sultanate.
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    Although many at the time
    considered this
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    nothing more than a continuation
    of the hostilities
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    between Christians and Muslims,
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    in reality it paved the way
    for the Portuguese
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    to expand their dominions
    and economic interests
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    beyond the Iberian Peninsula
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    and marked the beginning
    of the Portuguese Empire.
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    Despite capturing the city,
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    the Portuguese were not able
    to advance further into North Africa
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    as they had initially planned,
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    owing to determined resistance
    by local Muslim forces.
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    Nevertheless they continued
    to guarnison Ceuta
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    and used its harbor as a base
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    to explore the Atlantic
    coastline of Africa.
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    This policy of maritime exploration
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    was championed by a prominent figure
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    in the early days
    of the Portuguese Empire´:
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    Prince Henry, the Navigator.
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    He was curious to know
    how far the Muslim territories in Africa
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    extended Southward,
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    and whether it would be possible
    to reach Asia by an easterly sea route.
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    Consequently, scores of Portuguese ships
    began to set off into the Atlantic Ocean
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    and around the coast of North Africa
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    probing further and further into what
    were at the time uncharted waters.
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    The islands of Madeira and the Azores
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    were first cited in 1419 and 1427,
    respectively,
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    and were subsequently
    incorporated
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    as the latest additions
    to the expanding Portuguese Empire.
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    One of the first natural barriers
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    the Portuguese encountered
    on their explorations
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    was Cape Bojador.
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    The violent waters that surround it
    had claimed many vessels
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    that had previously tried to pass through
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    and it was widely deemed
    to be a point of no return.
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    That was until 1434,
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    when Gil Eanes successfully
    found the navigable passage
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    around the cape
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    and opened up further
    exploration South
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    towards subsaharan Africa.
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    No sooner had this feat been achieved
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    that the merchants of Lisbon
    began to search
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    for newer and more exotic markets
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    to which they could trade to.
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    gold, ivory, pepper, cotton and sugar,
    all from Africa,
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    soon became more commonplace
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    amongst the trading stools of Lisbon
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    as did the practice
    of selling African slaves
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    which began the long and dark history
    of the transatlantic slave trade
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    that would continue for the next 400 years
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    Over the subsequent decades
    of the 15th century,
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    the Portuguese ventured
    further and further South
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    down the coast of Africa.
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    reaching the Cape Verde Islands
    in 1456
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    and the Gulf of Guinea by the 1460s.
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    As they explored, they left behind
    a series of "padrões",
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    stone crosses engraved
    with the Portuguese coat of arms,
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    marking out their territorial claims
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    which were followed up
    with the construction of forts
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    and trading posts.
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    From these bases they engaged
    profitably in the gold and slave trades
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    which they held a virtual monopoly on
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    for well over a century.
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    The real prize for the
    portuguese merchants however
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    was a supposed, but as yet unconfirmed,
    sea route to Asia .
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    They hoped that the discovery
    of such a route
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    would allow them direct access
    to the spice markets of the Indies
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    and bypass the expensive
    arab and venetian merchants
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    who controlled the overland trade routes
    through the Middle East
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    and across the Mediterranean
    into Europe.
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    Then, in 1488 news reached
    the ears of the Portuguese authorities
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    that Bartholomew Dias had rounded
    the southern tip of Africa
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    and reached the Indian Ocean,
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    proving that such an easterly
    passage did indeed exist.
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    However, this revelation would soon
    be eclipsed in magnitude,
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    just four years later,
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    when Christopher Columbus sailed
    westwards across the Atlantic Ocean
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    in search of his own theoretical route
    to the Indies
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    and in the process inadvertently
    discovered an entirely New World.
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    The discovery of the Americas
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    which Columbus claimed
    in the name of Spain
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    and initially believed to be part
    of Eastern Asia
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    quickly created a problem
    for the two Iberian Nations.
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    Not knowing where one set of recently
    discovered lands ended
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    and another began,
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    they consequently agreed to divide
    the world in two spheres of influence,
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    between themselves, marked
    by a north/south line of Meridian
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    roughly halfway
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    between the Cape Verde Islands
    controlled by Portugal
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    and the Caribbean Islands of the Americas
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    which Columbus had recently discovered
    and claimed for Spain.
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    The Treaty of Tordesilhas
    ratified this agreement in 1494
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    and effectively carved the world in two.
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    with the lands to the East of this line
    to be claimed solely by Portugal
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    and the lands to the West
    claimed solely by Spain.
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    With the dispute settled,
    Portugal could finally begin to undertake
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    its long-standing ambition
    of charting a sea route to Asia
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    and so, on the 8th of July 1497,
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    the explorer Vasco de Gama left Lisbon
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    with a fleet of four ships
    and a crew of 170 men
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    bound for the Indian Ocean
    in search of Asia.
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    After a voyage of some 10 months
    Vasco da Gama's expedition
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    finally made landfall
    on the Malibar coast of India
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    in May 1498
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    and subsequently met with the Zamorin,
    or king of Calicut
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    to establish the trade relations
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    that they they had long hoped for.
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    Whilst the Portuguese's arrival
    was greeted with hospitality,
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    the local indian traders
    found little value
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    in the trinkets and commodities
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    the Europeans had brought with them
    to exchange
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    and so, da Gama's expedition
    largely left empty-handed.
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    Their return journey back to Portugal
    took an agonizing amount of time
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    owing to the monsoon conditions
    they had to face up at sea
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    which took an immense toll
    on both the crew and the ships
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    Nevertheless the survivors arrived back
    in Lisbon during the summer of 1499
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    and were given a hero's welcome.
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    Despite the meager quantities
    of spices and other goods
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    they had brought back.
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    Although the expedition itself
    may not have been profitable,
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    it demonstrated that maritime trade
    to Asia was possible
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    and had huge potential .
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    The second expedition to India
    set sail in 1500
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    under the command of
    Pedro Alvares Cabral.
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    Although while traversing
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    across the Atlantic Ocean
    sailed too far West
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    and unexpectedly, reached
    the coast of what is now Brazi.
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    Although this discovery
    may have been unintentional
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    some speculation suggests
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    the Portuguese may have
    already been aware of Brazil's existence
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    and secretly knew that this part
    of South America
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    fell within their designated territory
    according to the Treaty of Tordesilhas.
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    Cabral recommended
    to the Portuguese King, Manuel I,
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    that the land be settled
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    and two follow-up voyages
    were sent in 1501 and 1503.
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    The land was found to be abundant
    in brazilwood
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    from which it later inherited its name
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    but the failure to find gold or silver
    meant that for the time being
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    the Portuguese instead decided
    to concentrate their efforts
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    on the invaluable trade out of India.
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    As the first decade of the 16th century
    progressed,
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    the Portuguese ventured further
    into other parts of Asia
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    such as Sri Lanka and Indonesia,
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    where they discovered the sources
    of cinnamon and nutmeg.
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    So valuable were these commodities
    that Alfonso de Albuquerque.
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    the first appointed Vice-Roy
    of Portuguese India
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    ordered the construction
    of trading posts and fortifications
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    along the 14,000 miles long route,
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    stretching from Portugal
    to the East Indies.
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    These served as basis of operations
    for conducting trade
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    and ensured the safeguarding
    of their valuable cargos
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    that were to be transported
    on the long arduous journey
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    back to the markets of Europe.
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    Shortly thereafter,
    the Portuguese trading network
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    stretched to cover an area
    surrounding the coastlines of Africa,
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    Arabia, India, Indonesia
    and even as far as China and Japan.
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    Although the Portuguese were
    primarily motivated
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    to establish trade relations
    through peaceful means
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    their arrival into Asia was often met
    with a fair degree of suspicion
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    from local merchants
    who saw them
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    as nothing more than foreign
    interlopers on their territory.
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    Consequently as tensions grew,
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    the Portuguese took to enforcing
    their trading activity
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    with the use of force
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    Throughout the 16th century
    numerous conflicts broke out
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    across the wider indopacific region,
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    as the Portuguese engaged in warfare
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    against the numerous
    sultanates and empires of Asia.
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    Often possessing
    superior military technology
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    over their adversaries,
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    the Portuguese were largely successful
    at defending their commercial enterprises
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    as well as going on the offensive
    to capture strategic targets
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    that they wish to take for themselves.
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    However, it was not just
    trade and conquest
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    that advanced the realms
    of the Portuguese Empire.
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    Religion also had its part to play
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    Accompanying the officials, merchants,
    mariners and soldiers,
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    on board the ships leaving Lisbon
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    were small numbers
    of priests and missionaries
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    typically belonging to the Jesuit order.
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    They had been ordered
    by the Portuguese monarchy
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    to spread the Catholic faith
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    amongst the native peoples
    of Asia and Africa
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    who they had come into contact with.
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    this policy had mixed successes
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    for, though their efforts
    help towards establishing relations
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    and new settlements, such as the port
    of Nagasaki in Japan, in 1571,
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    Elsewhere the priests and missionaries
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    spread the word of God
    through violence and coercion.
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    In the case of the Goa,
    Inquisition for example,
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    they heavily persecuted the Hindu
    population of Portuguese India
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    in a bid to convert them
    to Christianity.
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    The early period
    of the Portuguese Empire
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    was concentrated on developing
    trade across Asia and Africa,
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    which were much more lucrative
    and easily accessible compared to Brazil.
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    12:25
    attitudes towards this quickly changed
    12:27
    however when other Europe European
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    explorers particularly the French began
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    to develop interests of their own in the
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    territory and established a trading post
    12:35
    there in
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    1531 the Portuguese response as decreed
    12:40
    by King XO III on the 28th of September
    12:43
    1532 was to deter further French
    12:45
    incursions to the region by initiating a
    12:47
    large-scale colonization program that
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    would see the land divided up and ruled
    12:52
    by 15 separate captaincies with
    12:55
    instructions to build settlements Grant
    12:57
    allotments and administer Justice
    12:59
    each Captain was responsible for
    13:01
    developing and absorbing the costs of
    13:03
    colonization although they were not
    13:05
    allowed to own the land
    13:06
    outright despite their best efforts
    13:09
    however only two of the captaincies
    13:11
    reached any stage of significant
    13:12
    development owing principally to their
    13:15
    dedication in growing the highly
    13:16
    profitable crop of sugar cane this
    13:19
    required an enormous amount of Labor to
    13:21
    produce and over time it became
    13:23
    exclusively reliant on enslaved Africans
    13:25
    to work in its Fields such was the scale
    13:28
    and importance of the sugar industry
    13:30
    that of the estimated 4 million Africans
    13:32
    who were sold into slavery in the
    13:33
    Americas between the 16th and 19th
    13:35
    centuries up to 40% ended up in Brazil
    13:40
    the Portuguese presence in South America
    13:42
    began to slowly develop As Time passed
    13:44
    with the cities of Bahia sa Paulo and
    13:47
    Rio de Janeiro all being founded in the
    13:49
    mid-6th
    13:50
    century however a significant change in
    13:53
    the progress of the Portuguese Empire
    13:55
    occurred in 1580 when a succession
    13:58
    crisis triggered by the untimely death
    14:00
    of King Sebastian 2 years earlier saw
    14:02
    Philip II of Spain invade Portugal and
    14:05
    take the throne for himself with that
    14:09
    the two crowns and overseas empires of
    14:11
    Spain and Portugal were United under the
    14:13
    Iberian Union although they would
    14:16
    continue to be ruled separately and
    14:18
    distinctly from one
    14:19
    another during this time however in the
    14:22
    late 16th century Spain was at war with
    14:25
    England France and the Netherlands and
    14:28
    as a result of the union with its
    14:29
    Iberian neighbor Portugal quickly found
    14:31
    itself embroiled in The Wider conflict
    14:33
    with European Rivals who were all
    14:35
    competing to establish overseas empires
    14:37
    of their own the Dutch in particular
    14:40
    posed the most comprehensive threat to
    14:42
    Portugal at this time for they had just
    14:44
    gained their independence from the
    14:45
    Spanish hapsburg monarchy in 1581 and
    14:48
    being Adept merchants and Maritime
    14:50
    explorers were Keen to participate in
    14:52
    the lucrative trade to Asia for
    14:54
    themselves these Ambitions were also
    14:56
    shared by the English and both soon
    14:58
    learned of the navigational routes
Title:
Toda a História do Império Português
Description:

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Video Language:
Portuguese
Duration:
24:54

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