Emperor 'Pedro II' (
pron. IPA [];
December 2,
1825 –
December 5,
1891)
KG was the second and last
Emperor of
Brazil. His name in full was ''Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo'', ''By the Grace of God and Unanimous Acclamation of the People, Constitutional Emperor and Perpetual Defender of Brazil''.
He was born on
December 2,
1825 in
Rio de Janeiro, making him Brazil's only native-born monarch.
The Regency

Pedro II at age 12
When he was a boy of five, Pedro became the Emperor of Brazil. His father
Pedro I abdicated the Throne on
April 7,
1831, after violent protests in Brazil against his careless handling of internal affairs, to fight a
civil war in
Portugal. The aim of the war in Portugal was to restore the throne of Portugal to
Maria II, elder sister of Pedro II.
As a result of caring for his children's interests, in
1834, his father, Pedro I of Brazil (and Pedro IV of Portugal), had a daughter on the throne of Portugal (who was only 15 years old) and a son, namely Pedro II himself, who was Emperor of Brazil, at age 9.
During the Emperor's childhood, a series of
regents administered the government, in accordance with Constitution. In 1840, the Brazilian Imperial Parliament, or General Assembly, abolished the regency and declared Pedro to be of age to govern. Though only 14, Pedro already had a reputation as a judicious ruler, and the Imperial Parliament hoped that his popularity would quell the regional revolts that had rocked Brazil in the 1830s. Emperor Pedro II was consecrated and crowned on July 18, 1841.
Family life
Dom Pedro II was married on
September 4,
1842 to
Princess Teresa of the Two Sicilies (1822–1889), the youngest daughter of King
Francis I of the Two Sicilies (1777–1830) and
Maria Isabella of Spain. It was quite difficult for Brazilian monarchs to find a bride abroad, since their country was very far from Europe, and all the marriages they contracted when reigning were with princesses of small political importance. (Pedro I had been married to Leopoldina of Austria when he was Crown Prince of Portugal but, once widowed, he could only get the hand of a granddaughter of Eugene de Beauharnais, an origin which was not highly appraised at the time of his second marriage).
Pedro II and Teresa Cristina had four children:
★ Afonso de Bourbon e Bragança (1845–1847),
Prince of Grão Pará and ''Prince Imperial of Brazil''.
★ '
Isabel de Bourbon e Bragança', who married
Louis Philippe Marie Ferdinand Gaston, comte d'Eu, son of
Louis of Orleans, Duke of Nemours.
★
Leopoldina de Bourbon e Bragança (1847–1871), who married
Prince Ludwig August of Kohary of
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.
★ Pedro de Bourbon e Bragança (1848–1850), Prince of Grão Pará and Prince Imperial of Brazil.
Emperor of Brazil

Emperor Pedro II in regalia, in the opening of the annual session of the Brazilian Imperial Parliament (General Assembly), 1873.
Pedro II reigned as Emperor of Brazil for 58 years, (under the slogan "União e Indústria" [Union and Industry]). The period saw the beginnings of industrialization, the first paved roads, the first steam-engine railway, a submarine telegraphy cable, and the introduction of the telephone. He traveled to the United States and attended the
Philadelphia Exposition of 1876, where
Alexander Graham Bell showed him his new
telephone. Pedro II probably was the first Brazilian to use the invention. He recited
Shakespeare's classic line from
Hamlet, "To be or not to be" into it, and exclaimed, "This thing speaks!".
Liberal in outlook, Pedro II took steps to end
slavery; the final abolition edict, the
Golden Law, was signed in his absence by his daughter
Princess Isabel, on
May 13,
1888. Pedro II also took pains to learn
Guarani, the most widely spoken indigenous language in nineteenth-century Brazil. He was widely respected by Brazilians of all social levels as an enlightened monarch who ruled in a principled, rational, moderate fashion. Historian
Thomas Skidmore has compared Pedro II to
Queen Victoria, another nineteenth-century monarch who was popular for similar reasons.
Though an enlightened monarch, Pedro II nonetheless retained extensive power over the Brazilian government. Under the
Brazilian Constitution of 1824, the Emperor possessed Poder Moderador (Moderating Power), i.e. the power to temper the will of Brazil's representative government. In practice, this meant that Pedro II had the right to veto legislation, dissolve the lower house of the legislature (the only one that was elected), and call new elections at his pleasure. Pedro II generally respected the wishes of the electorate, but his favoritism towards the Conservative party in 1868 marred his reputation for evenhandedness. The unexpectedly long and costly
Paraguayan War of
1865-
1870 also diminished his popularity.
In the wake of the Paraguayan War, a war not started by Brazil, the monarchy was seen by some to be an obstacle to modernization and economic growth. Liberals called both for greater regional autonomy. The abolition of slavery caused much freedom in Brazil but irritated the wealthy elite. A military
coup d'etat on
November 15,
1889 overthrew the monarchy. He and his family went into exile in
Portugal, and Brazil created a new federalist, republican government under the
Brazilian Constitution of 1891.
Pedro II died on
December 5,
1891 in
Paris,
France. His and his wife's remains were taken from Portugal to Brazil in
1922, and were reburied in
Petrópolis, their former summer residence, in
1939.

The Imperial Mausoleum at Petrópolis Cathedral.
Books
★ Barman, Roderick J. ''Citizen Emperor: Pedro II and the Making of Brazil, 1825–1891.'' 1999.
★ Brown, Rose. ''American Emperor: Dom Pedro II of Brazil.'' 1945.
★ da Costa, Emilia Viotti. ''The Brazilian Empire: Myths and Histories.'' 2000; 1985.
★ Harding, Bertita. ''Amazon Throne.'' London: Harrap, 1942.
★ Schwarcz, Lilia Moritz. ''The Emperor's Beard: Dom Pedro II and His Tropical Monarchy in Brazil.'' Trans. John Gledson. 2003.
★ Skidmore, Thomas. ''Brazil: Five Centuries of Change.'' New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
See also
★
Empire of Brazil
★
History of Brazil
External links
★
Pedro II and America
★
Historical Text Archive
★
Brazilian Senate webpage (in Portuguese)
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