Jorge de Avilez Zuzarte de Sousa Tavares explained

Jorge de Avilez
Birth Date:1785 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Portalegre, Portugal
Death Place:Lisbon, Portugal
Serviceyears:1804–1845
Rank:General
Commands:
  • Militia Regiment of Crato (1804)
  • Volunteer Regiment of Portalegre (1808)
  • 1st Battalion of Caçadores (1809)
  • 2nd Regiment of Infantry (1812)
  • 5th Regiment of Infantry (1814)
  • 1st Brigade of Royal Volunteers of the Prince (1816)
Battles:

Jorge de Avilez Zuzarte de Sousa Tavares (28 March 1785 – 15 February 1845) was a Portuguese military officer and statesman. He fought in the Peninsular War and in the Portuguese conquest of the Banda Oriental.

Early life

Jorge de Avilez was born on 28 March 1785 in Portalegre, the legitimate son of Jorge Vellez de Souza Tavares. He was baptised on 14 May of the same year.

Early career

Jorge de Alviez entered the Royal College of Nobles in 1797 with his two older brothers. He studied arts until 1801, when he returned to Portalegre. He went to Lisbon with his family in 1801, due to the War of the Oranges. Having finished in the Army as Cadet, he was appointed Colonel of the Militia Regiment of Crato on 24 June 1804. In 1807 he was chosen to be Superintendent of stud farms of Portalegre, the same function his father had. The Militia Regiment of Crato was discharged, because of the Militia Reform of October 1807, in 1808 he was put in charge the Volunteer Regiment of Portalegre, created by the Junta of Portalegre, so they could help fight the French. With the transfer of the Volunteer Regiment to the Army in 1809, he was appointed commander of the 1st Battalion of Caçadores with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel.

Peninsular War

He led the battalion through all their battles in the 2nd Brigade of the Light Division until the Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro. In February 1812 he was promoted to Colonel and given command of the 2nd Regiment of Infantry which was part of the renowned Algarve Brigade of the Portuguese Division, which was a division organised in the Anglo-Portuguese Army. He fought at the Siege of Badajoz to the Battle of Toulouse the last big battle of the War of the Sixth Coalition. His wife followed him from Badajoz to Toulouse. In 1816 he was promoted to Brigadier.

In Brazil

In 1817, with the establishment of the Division of Volunteers of the Prince and his being transferred to Brazil to help with the Conquest of Montevideo, he was given the rank of Field Marshal. In 1818, he was made Governor of Montevideo.

He commanded the Campaign of Banda Oriental, distinguishing himself in the Battle of Paço de Arenas in September 1819. In 1821, in Brazil, he was given the rank of Lieutenant-General, due to his appointment as Governor of Arms of the Court and Province of Rio de Janeiro, and suppressing the riots which had been occurring because of the departure of King John VI and the court.

On 5 June 1821, as commander of the soldiers in Rio de Janeiro, he directed the ultimatum to Prince Pedro that he had to swear to uphold the foundations of the Constitution, dismiss the Count of Arcos and nominate a governing junta. In October he demanded again that Prince Pedro publicly announce his adherence to the decisions of the Cortes gathered in Lisbon. Prince Pedro obeyed and decided, on a first impulse, to return to Europe. But in January 1822 he publicly declared that he had decided to stay in Brazil, a fact known as Dia do Fico (Day of Stay). Jorge de Avilez resigned from the Government of Arms and, fearing an attack by Brazilian troops, he retreated to Praia Grande, in Niterói, which he fortified but was later expelled by the Prince Regent. The Portuguese Division embarked in February, arriving at Lisbon in May 1822.

Liberal Wars

Jorge de Avilez was elected deputy in 1822. In 1823, he was nominated by the Cortes as Commander-in-Chief of the Portuguese Army, to counter the movements of Prince Miguel. He could not prevent the coup d'état known as the Vilafrancada, which ended the first liberal period, reestablishing the absolutist regime.

A prisoner in the Castle of São Jorge, he was transferred to the Tower of Belém. Judged, he was dismissed from his rank of Lieutenant-General and condemned to a year of imprisonment in Castelo de Vide. In June 1827, during the regency of the Infanta Isabel Maria of Portugal, he was exonerated and returned to his post. With the return of Prince Miguel, he asked permission to go to Portalegre, but was arrested again in June 1828 and sent to São Julião da Barra Fortress. In 1832 he was transferred to Almeida and later to Bragança, from where he managed to escape to Spain. His wife was arrested and held in the Tower of Belém, in the Limoeiro and in the Cadeia do Aljube. The diplomatic corps in Lisbon demanded his release and succeeded.

King Pedro IV reconciled with Jorge de Avilez at the end of the civil war, and appointed him to Military Governor of the Court and Province of Extremadura, with the rank of Lieutenant-General. With the reorganisation of the Army he was given the command of the 1st Military Division, being later transferred to the 7th, for political reasons. Named Peer of the realm in 1835, he was given the title of Viscount of Reguengo. He joined the Setembrismo movement in 1836. He was appointed senator, according to the Constitution of 1838. In April 1838 he was awarded the title of Count of Avilez.

Promotions and Units

Rank Unit Date
Vogal Supreme Council of Military Justice 8 August 1834
16 June 1834
Military Governor 27 May 1834
Army 21 May 1828
Army 28 May 1823
Governor of Arms 22 April 1821
21 April 1821
Governor 27 January 1818
25 April 1817
1st Brigade of Royal Volunteers of the Prince
4 March 1816
5th Regiment of Infantry 1814
2nd Infantry Regiment 5 February 1812
1st Battalion of Caçadores 21 January 1809
Volunteer Regiment of Portalegre 22 July 1808
Militia Regiment of Crato 24 June 1804
Officer cadet

See also

Sources

Jorge de Avilez, oficial português