João de Sande Magalhães Mexia Ayres de Campos, 2nd Count of Ameal

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The Count of Ameal
ComC, CvNSC
The 2nd Count of Ameal.jpg
The 2nd Count of Ameal in the uniform of the Portuguese diplomatic corps, c. 1900.
Full name
João de Sande Magalhães Mexia Ayres de Campos, 1st Viscount Ameal, 2nd Count of Ameal
Born11 May 1877
Coimbra, Portugal
Died22 December 1952
Ota, Alenquer, Portugal
Noble familyAyres de Campos
Spouse(s)D. Maria Benedita Falcão Barbosa de Azevedo e Bourbon
FatherJoão Maria Correia Ayres de Campos, 1st Count of Ameal
MotherD. Maria Amélia de Sande Mexia Vieira da Mota
Occupationpolitician, diplomat

João de Sande Magalhães Mexia Ayres de Campos, 2nd Count of Ameal, ComC, CvNSC (Coimbra, 11 May 1877 – Ota, Alenquer, 22 December 1952) was a Portuguese politician and career diplomat, having served in this capacity in the Hague, and also as Secretary to Portugal's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Venceslau de Lima.[1] He was as a key participant in the failed republican Municipal Library Elevator Coup of 1908, which targeted the Constitutional monarchy of King Charles I and what were perceived as the dictatorial powers of his then prime minister João Franco.

Early life and marriage[]

João Ayres de Campos was born in Coimbra, the eldest son of João Maria Correia Ayres de Campos and his wife Maria Amélia de Sande Mexia Vieira da Mota, niece and sole heir of Carlos Pinto Vieira da Mota, 1st Count of Juncal. He was granted the courtesy title Viscount of Ameal (Portuguese: Visconde do Ameal) by Carlos I of Portugal in 1901, at the age of 23, upon his father's accession to the peerage as Count of Ameal. These titles were confirmed by king Manuel II in exile in 1920.[2] He would succeed in the comital title at his father's death in 1920.

On 21 November 1901 he married Maria Benedita Falcão Barbosa de Azevedo e Bourbon, issued from a prominent Bragan family and sister of the 2nd Count of Azevedo.

Revolutionary politics and attempted coup[]

Plans of Mesnier de Ponsard's elevator near the Municipal Library in Lisbon, owned by the then Viscount of Ameal

In 1905, João Ayres de Campos was part of the Dissidência Progressista, an influential left-wing breakaway from the Partido Progressista in the last years of Portugal's Liberal Monarchy, led by José Maria de Alpoim.[3] The party was staunchly opposed to the conservative Partido Regenerador, to which his father had belonged throughout his political career, and Alpuim's wing had close ties with Afonso Costa's republican movement.

With several members of this group and in cooperation with Costa's Republican Party, João (then styled Viscount of Ameal) was involved in the failed Municipal Library Elevator Coup, one month before the Lisbon Regicide.[4] The coup derives its name from the large public elevator designed by [1] (Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard) and owned by Ameal near Lisbon City Hall which served as the conspirators' headquarters, and where many would be arrested on the afternoon of 28 January 1908.[5][6] Its organisers were opposed to the administrative dictatorship of Prime Minister João Franco, and to King Carlos I's perceived protection of Franco's Liberal Regeneration Party.

Unlike co-conspirators Afonso Costa, António Egas Moniz and the Viscount of Ribeira Brava, among others, Ameal avoided arrest, having managed to escape to Galicia disguised as a campino;[7][8] a detailed plan for the intended coup was however found among his papers, testifying to his prominence in the plot.[9] In a later interview to the Spanish periodical La Voz de Galicia, he reminisced about his involvement in the attempted revolution, acknowledging that he had hosted the conspirators in his property and given them a key to the premises of the elevator. He did not, however, elaborate on the extent of his participation in the tentative coup d'etat.[10]

Later life[]

Ameal remained in Spain after the dismantlement of the Elevador conspiracy, and only resumed his political career upon the proclamation of the Portuguese Republic on 5 October 1910. His later public life was developed under the auspices of the First Portuguese Republic. However, he eventually became disillusioned with the new regime's instability, and by the early 1930s he welcomed the dawn of Salazar's authoritarian Estado Novo – of which his son João Francisco de Barbosa Azevedo de Sande Ayres de Campos, later 3rd Count of Ameal, was one of the leading ideologues.[11]

He was killed alongside his wife in a car accident in Ota, near Lisbon, in 1952.,[12] and is buried in the monumental Gothic Revival mausoleum of the Counts of Ameal in Coimbra's Conchada cemetery.[13]

He was succeeded in his titles by his only son, a prolific author and a committed monarchist.[14]

References[]

  1. ^ Various authors, Nobreza de Portugal e Brasil (Lisbon, 1983), vol. II, p. 275.
  2. ^ Various authors, Anuário da Nobreza de Portugal (Lisboa, 1985), vol. I, p. 220.
  3. ^ Maltez, José Adelino (coord.). Entry "Dissidência Progressista (1905)" in Centro de Estudos do Pensamento Político (online resource), Retrieved 25 December 2017 (http://www.iscsp.ulisboa.pt/~cepp/indexfro1.php3?http://www.iscsp.ulisboa.pt/~cepp/partidos_e_movimentos/portugueses/dissidencia_progressista.htm)
  4. ^ Abreu, Jorge de, O 5 de Outubro – A Revolução Portuguesa (Texto Editores, 2010), chapter VI, "A 'ratoeira' do elevador, insucesso do complot".
  5. ^ Cabral, António. O Agonizar da Monarchia: Erros e Crimes. Novas Revelações (Lisbon: José Franco, 1931), p. 210: "No dia 28 de janeiro, pela tarde, alguns conjurados reuniram-se no elevador da Bibliotheca, pertencente ao deputado dissidente, sr. visconde do Ameal, que lhes facultou a respectiva chave, como elle proprio declarou, mais tarde, n'uma interview do jornal La Voz de Galicia. O local era propicio: d'ali, se a revolução vingasse, os conspiradores não teriam de dar muitos passos para irem acclamar a republica, da varanda da Camara Municipal."
  6. ^ Rocha Martins (Lisboa: José Bastos [no date]), p. 66: "o elevador era pertença do visconde [sic] do Ameal, e estava há alguns dias parado".
  7. ^ Ilustração Portugueza (1908), p. 253: "Outros dos seus correligionarios conseguem pôr-se a salvo, como os srs. visconde do Ameal, que se refugia na Galliza, e visconde de Predralva, que é detido em Encinasola, povoado de Hespanha."
  8. ^ Rocha Martins, Vermelhos, brancos e azuis: homens de estado, homens de armas, homens de letras, vols. 3–4 (Lisbon: Vida Mundial, 1948), p. 48: "Ele estava com os seus cúmplices no elevador da Biblioteca Pública, que não funcionava e era pertença do visconde do Ameal, dissidente e conjurado. Este fugiu, vestido de campino, entre os guardas de gado do grande lavrador Palha Blanco, que apesar de receber D. Carlos em casa e de se dizer um amigo, não hesitara em ajudar à. fuga do titular que tentava contra a Monarquia. "
  9. ^ Ribeiro, Armando, A Revolução Portuguesa (Lisbon: J. Romano Torres, 1912), p. 236 "[...] e o Visconde do Ameal, este portador de importantes instrucções para a revolução."
  10. ^ Cabral, António. O Agonizar da Monarchia: Erros e Crimes. Novas Revelações (Lisbon: José Franco, 1931), p. 210.
  11. ^ Pinto, Antonieta Maria da Silva. João Ameal, o historiador do regime. Dissertação de Mestrado em História Contemporânea de Portugal (Coimbra, 2003).
  12. ^ Various authors, "Ameal (Condes de)" in Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira, vol. II, Lisboa, 1965, p. 311-312.
  13. ^ Paulo Duarte de Almeida, Pedras de Armas nos Cemitérios de Coimbra (Instituto de Genealogia e Heráldica da Universidade do Porto, 2012), p. 81.
  14. ^ Ernesto Castro Leal, "A Cruzada Nacional D. Nuno Álvares Pereira e as origens do Estado Novo (1918–1938)", in Análise Social, vol. xxxiii (148), 1998 (4.°), pp. 823–851: 833.

See also[]

Portuguese nobility
Preceded by Count of Ameal
1920–1957
Succeeded by
João Francisco de Barbosa Azevedo de Sande Ayres de Campos, 3rd Count of Ameal
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