The Spread of …

Years: 1846 - 1846
October

The Spread of the Uprising and the Patuleia Civil War (1846–1847)

Following its initial outbreak in Minho, the Revolution of Maria da Fonte soon spread to the rest of Portugal, forcing the dismissal of António Bernardo da Costa Cabral. In his place, Pedro de Sousa Holstein, 1st Duke of Palmela, was appointed as head of a new government in an attempt to restore stability.

However, the situation took a dramatic turn on October 6, 1846, when Queen Maria II, in a palace coup known as the Emboscada (Ambush), abruptly dismissed the Palmela government. In its stead, she appointed Marshal João Francisco de Saldanha Oliveira e Daun, 1st Duke of Saldanha, a move that reignited the insurrection.

The resulting conflict escalated into a full-scale civil war, known as the Patuleia, lasting for eight months. The war ultimately ended with the Convention of Gramido, signed on June 30, 1847, following the intervention of foreign military forces from the Quadruple Alliance. This resolution, imposed by Britain, France, Spain, and Portugal’s own loyalist factions, reasserted royal authority while further entrenching the political divisions that had plagued the nation since the Liberal Wars.

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