The coup of December 1, 1640, ended sixty years of Spanish rule. It began with farce and violence: Miguel de Vasconcelos, the hated Secretary of State, was killed in a closet and thrown out the window. This was a conservative aristocratic coup, not a popular revolution, that restored Portuguese independence.
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The 20th Century by Albert Robida
Continue readingIn 1893, Albert Robida published "Le Vingtième Siècle. La vie électrique," imagining France in 1952. Amidst flying airplanes and biological warfare, he predicted something extraordinary: virtual social networks through the "telephonoscope." It took 130 years, but he was right.
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Adelina Patti in Lisbon
Continue readingIn March 1886, Lisbon panicked. The world's greatest opera star was about to arrive at the São Carlos Theatre, but tickets had sold out in 48 hours, and rumors circulated about her decline. At 43, could Adelina Patti still enchant? The city was divided between adoration and skepticism.
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Little Walter: When Laughter Hides Sadness
Continue readingLittle Walter revolutionized the art of the circus by transforming the clown Auguste into an unpredictable and profoundly human character. From poverty to stardom, from war to longing, this is the story of Alexandre Ulrich and his deep connection to Portugal.