Afonso Costa Explained

Afonso Costa
Honorific-Suffix:GCTE, GCL
Office:Prime Minister of Portugal
Term Start3:9 January 1913
Term End3:9 February 1914
President3:Manuel de Arriaga
Predecessor3:Duarte Leite
Successor3:Bernardino Machado
Term Start2:29 November 1915
Term End2:15 March 1916
President2:Bernardino Machado
Predecessor2:José de Castro
Successor2:António José de Almeida
Term Start1:4 September 1916
Term End1:5 October 1916
President1:Bernardino Machado
Predecessor1:António José de Almeida
Successor1:António José de Almeida -->
Term Start:25 April 1917
Term End:11 December 1917
President:Bernardino Machado
Predecessor:António José de Almeida
Successor:Revolutionary Junta
Birth Date:1871 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Seia, Portugal
Death Place:Paris, France
Party:Portuguese Republican
(later Democratic)
Otherparty:Republic Defence League (1927–1937)
Relations:Catarina Wallenstein (great-great-granddaughter)
Children:4
Alma Mater:University of Coimbra
Signature:Assinatura Afonso Costa.svg

Afonso Augusto da Costa, GCTE, GCL (pronounced as /pt/; born in Seia, 6 March 1871;[1] died in Paris, 11 May 1937) was a Portuguese lawyer, professor and republican politician.

Political career

Costa was the leader of the Portuguese Republican Party and he was one of the major figures of the Portuguese First Republic. He was a republican deputy in the Chamber of Deputies during the last years of the monarchy. After the proclamation of the republic, he was Minister for Justice during Teófilo Braga's short-lived provisional government, which lasted from 5 October 1910 to 3 September 1911.

During this period, Costa signed the controversial laws which expelled the Jesuits from Portugal, abolished all the religious orders and established the separation of church and state. These things made him a symbol of the anticlericalism of the First Republic. Also, he was instrumental in the passage of many progressive laws, such as those concerning divorce, family relations, civil registry of marriage, leases of property, judicial reorganization, industrial accidents and censorship of the press.He served as Prime Minister of Portugal three times. The first time, he was called by President Manuel de Arriaga to form a government, as the leader of the Republican Democratic Party. This term of office (which he combined with the role of Finance Minister) lasted from 9 January 1913 to 9 February 1914.[2] He returned to power, as Prime Minister and Finance Minister, from 29 November 1915 to 16 March 1916.

Following more political instability Costa was yet again Prime Minister, from 25 April 1917 to 8 December 1917, in a national-unity government nicknamed the Sacred Union, to support Portugal's entrance into World War I. After Sidónio Pais's military coup d'état in December 1917, Costa went into exile in Paris and though he did sometimes return briefly to Portugal, he never again lived there, even after Pais's assassination in 1918.

After the end of the war, Costa led the Portuguese delegation to the Paris Peace Conference from 12 March 1919 and he signed the Treaty of Versailles of 28 June 1919 on behalf of Portugal. He was the Portuguese representative at the first assembly of the League of Nations.

On 10 July 1919 he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Military Order of the Tower and of the Sword, of Valour, Loyalty and Merit.

On a number of other occasions during the First Republic, Costa received invitations to head the government again but he always refused. After the 28 May coup d'état, he strongly opposed the military dictatorship; he equally opposed the right-wing civilian Catholic Estado Novo (New State) administration led from 1932 by Dr. Salazar. He died in Paris on 11 May 1937.

Family circumstances

A foundling

Costa was given up at birth as a foundling at the baby hatch of the Santa Casa da Misericórdia (Holy House of Mercy) of the town of Seia in north-central Portugal. By way of explanation:

"The Santa Casa da Misericórdia was founded [in Lisbon] in 1582, by Jose de Anchieta, a Jesuit. It is opened to the poor of every nation and religion, and affords a refuge to foundlings and orphans. The foundlings are deposited in a revolving wheel, which is placed perpendicularly in the wall. The wheel is divided into four apartments, one of which opens without. The heartless mother who wishes to part with her infant child, has only to deposit it in the box, and a revolution of the wheel passes it within the walls, never more to be reclaimed."[3]

Together with his older brother and sister, he was registered as a son of unknown parents with the name Afonso Maria de Ligório. Ten years later, his parents, Sebastião Fernandes da Costa and Ana Augusta Pereira, recognized him and his brother and sister. They married and readopted the children. Costa re-assumed his birth name in order to conceal the circumstances of his birth.

Marriage

He was married in Coimbra on 15 September 1892 to Alzira Coelho de Campos de Barros de Abreu (born at Oliveira do Hospital, 20 April 1876; died at Lisbon, 1970), the daughter of Albano Mendes de Abreu, a medical doctor, and his wife, Emília de Barros Coelho de Campos. She was the sister of the writer, José de Barros Mendes de Abreu, who was born at Oleiros, Vilar Barroco, 20 July 1878.

Costa's wife is an ancestor of the modern-day actresses, Sofia Sá da Bandeira and Catarina Wallenstein.

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. [Baptised]
  2. "." The Portuguese Parliamentary Republic, 1910–1926, by Stanley G. Payne, Chapter 23 of A History of Spain and Portugal, Volume 2
  3. The National Magazine, by Abel Stevens and James Floy, Carlton & Phillips, 1854, v. 4, p. 292. (Original from Harvard University, digitized March 1, 2007.