João
IV was proclaimed king by a cortes convoked in 164l. Faced
with the general ruin of the realm and threats to his crown
from Spain, his first act was to defend the kingdom. He
immediately created a council of war, appointed military
governors in the provinces, recruited soldiers, rebuilt
forts, and constructed an arms foundry. At the same time, he
vigorously sought diplomatic recognition of his monarchy and
Portugal's independence from Spain. On June 1, 1641,
João IV signed an alliance with Louis XIII of France
and soon made peace with Holland and England. By the time of
his death in 1656, João IV had consolidated and
restored the monarchy by making peace with former enemies,
recouped some lost colonial possessions, and defeated
Spanish attempts to reincorporate Portugal into the Iberian
Union. When
João died, his queen, Luísa de Gusmão,
became regent because the royal couple's oldest son,
Teodósio, had died three years before his father and
their youngest son, Afonso, was only ten years old. Although
a disease in infancy had left Afonso partially paralyzed and
had impaired his intelligence, his mother succeeded in
having him proclaimed king. Afonso VI (r.1662-67) grew into
a degenerate who preferred riding, coursing bulls, and
watching cockfights. His marriage to Marie-Françoise
Isabelle of Savoy was annulled, and, in 1667, aware of the
need for a successor, Afonso consented to his own abdication
in favor of his brother, Pedro. During this period, the
Portuguese managed to fight off the last attempt by Spain to
reincorporate them into the Iberian Union by defeating the
Spanish invaders at Ameixial near Estremós. In 1666,
three years after this victory, Spain at last made peace and
recognized Portugal's independence. When
Afonso abdicated, he was banished to Terceira Island in the
Azores and his brother, who had married
Marie-Françoise, assumed the regency of the throne
until Afonso's death in 1683, after which he ruled in his
own right as Pedro II until 1706. During his regency, Pedro
had given the task of producing a coherent economic policy
to Luís de Menenses, count of Ericeira, who was
appointed head of the treasury. Known as the "Portuguese
Colbert," Ericeira implemented mercantilist policies in
Portugal similar to those of France. These policies sought
to protect Portuguese industries against foreign
competition. He published laws to enforce sobriety and
criticized luxury. Ericeira organized the textile industry
and imported looms from England. He stimulated the national
production of wool and silk by decreeing that only
Portuguese woolens and silks could be worn.
Library of Congress Country StudyRestoration
Library of Congress Country Study
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