League of Combatants | |
Native Name: | Liga dos Combatentes |
Formation: | (de facto) (de jure) |
Type: | Ex-service organisation |
Status: | Public utility status (instituição de utilidade pública) |
Abbreviation: | LC |
Founder: | João Jaime de Faria Affonso (1896–1966) |
Publication: | Combatente |
The League of Combatants (Portuguese: Liga dos Combatentes), originally established as the League of Combatants of the Great War (Portuguese: Liga dos Combatentes da Grande Guerra), is a Portuguese ex-service organisation established following the First World War. A private institution with public utility status, it is answerable to the Ministry of National Defence.
The first meeting of the League of Combatants of the Great War took place on 16 October 1923,[1] at the office of the lawyer João Jaime Faria Afonso in Lisbon.[2] Faria Affonso had been lobbying for the creation of the League starting in 1919, but achieved little initial success.[1]
The League was then headed by a "veterans commission" composed of Lieutenant Colonel Francisco Xavier da Cunha Aragão, Lieutenant Colonel João Maria Ferreira do Amaral, First Lieutenant Horácio Faria Pereira and Lieutenant Joaquim de Figueiredo Ministro. The League was established due to the unjust treatment of Great War veterans, especially those who had suffered lasting injuries. The founders of the League believed that, after having had fulfilled their duty and oath to spill their blood for the homeland, the veterans had (perhaps even intentionally) been abandoned by the government then in power, causing serious damage to the patriotism, discipline and morals of the Portuguese people.[2]