The Anglo-Portuguese Treaty, signed on June 13, 1373, marked the
earliest formal recognition of an alliance that already had roots more
than 200 years old and has remained in effect,
with a brief hiatus, ever since. That makes the relationship by far the oldest in-force alliance in the world.
Friendly relations started as Christian Portugal was beginning to
establish itself. Back in 1147 a joint army of Norman, English, Scottish, Flemish, Frisian, and German Crusaders arrived at the port of
Porto in June of that year after bad
weather forced the fleet that had departed from Dartmouth to seek shelter on their way to Jerusalem. Once there Portuguese King Alfonso I presented
them with a Papal document authorizing
the extension of the Second Crusade
to include the Reconquista of the Iberian Peninsula. The king negotiated an agreement with the visiting knights and men at arms for
them to join him in a siege of Moorish
Lisbon in exchange for the right to loot
and plunder the city and hold
its nobles for ransom. 17,000 Crusaders
joined with Alfonso’s 7,000 man force to lay siege to the city. After
four months the Moors surrendered
and true to their words the Crusaders sacked
the city with the zeal and efficiency. Many of the knights found the city so
attractive that they stayed and settled there.
Others participated in the conquest
of the towns of Sintra, Almada, Palmela and Setúbal. Their decedents
merged with the Portuguese nobility
providing blood links between the countries.
The Moors surrender the English-led Crusaders after the Siege of Lisbon. |
An informal alliance between England and Portugal was formed in
1294. It was officially sealed with 1373 treaty between King Edward III of England and King
Ferdinand and Queen Eleanor
pledging “perpetual friendships, unions [and] alliances” between the two
nations. By this this time both nations
had established themselves as sea faring
countries with similar interests
in trade, access to European ports,
and fisheries.
In 1385 a crisis that began with the
death of Portuguese King Ferdinand I died
in 1383 leaving no male heir. His daughter, Princes Beatrice had been wed to King Juan I of Castile who then laid claim to the Portuguese
throne. Portuguese nobles and
particularly the powerful merchants of
Lisbon refused to recognize the claim and selected João or John, the Grand Master of
the Aviz Order and a bastard son of Peter I, as Rector and
Defender of the Realm. John called
upon English support and was sent a force of yeoman longbow men who trained the Portuguese in the new tactics that had defeated the French at Crécy in1346 and Poitiers 1356. The
effective use of the bowmen and Portuguese crossbowmen
against an advancing force of heavy
cavalry squeezed into a narrow front
defeated an invading Castilian army in April 1384 at the Battle of Atoleiros.
English longbowmen and tactics developed in battles with heavy French cavalry at Crecy and Poitiers helped the Portuguese defeat a larger Castilian invading army at the Battle of Atoleiros in 1384. |
The following year King Juan
personally led a massive new invasion army accompanied by 2000 French heavy
knights, plus allies from Aragon and
Italian principalities. At the Battle of Aljubarrota 6,500 Portuguese and 100 critical English
bowmen destroyed the Castilian joint force of more than 31,000. King John was forced to run for his life,
deserting his un-horsed chivalry.
About 5000 invaders were killed outright in the battle and almost as
many including hundreds of captured French knights who were hacked to death as prisoners and fleeing stragglers who
were attacked by villagers and
peasant.
John was crowned undisputed King of
Portugal establishing the new Aviz
dynasty. He was naturally grateful
to his English allies. When the
ambitious John of Gaunt, son of the
late king Edward III of England and
father of the future King Henry IV,
landed with an army in Galacia, a
kingdom north of Portugal whose ruler was a vassal of Juan of Castile,
to press a flimsy claim on the
Castilian throne, the Portuguese monarch was glad to lent him support.
John of Gaunt’s venture petered out,
however, when expected support from dissident Castilian nobles failed to
materialize. He accepted what amounted
to a large bribe and annual pension to renounce his claims on the
Castilian throne and go away. On the way
out, by way of thank you he gave his
daughter Philippa of Lancaster to be
the bride the Portuguese king.
The marriage between King John I of Portugal and Philippa of Lancaster. |
Close relations were further
enhanced with the new Treat of Windsor in
1386 which said:
It is cordially agreed that if, in time to come, one of the
kings or his heir shall need the support of the other, or his help, and in
order to get such assistance applies to his ally in lawful manner, the ally
shall be bound to give aid and succor to the other, so far as he is able
(without any deceit, fraud, or pretense) to the extent required by the danger
to his ally’s realms, lands, domains, and subjects; and he shall be firmly
bound by these present alliances to do this.
As the new queen Philippa had
extraordinary influence. Not only did she promote English interests
and trade—cod and woolens for wine, cork, salt, but she introduced the manners and formality of a Norman Court
to Lisbon, thereby strengthening her husband’s position as a truly national ruler with a compliant aristocracy. More importantly,
she gave birth to five sons and insisted on the finest
education for each. These sons would
fortify the Aviz Dynasty lead
to Portugal’s Golden Age as a world power.
Philippa’s eldest son, Duarte, wrote books on morality and religion became king in 1433.
Pedro, who travelled widely
and had an interest in history, was Regent from 1439 to1448 after Duarte
died of the plague in 1438. Ferdinand
the Saint Prince became a crusader and in the attack on Tangiers in 1437. Perhaps most important was Henrique, known to history as Prince Henry the Navigator the instigator and organizer of the Portugal’s early voyages of discovery which in turn led to a world girdling empire in
the Atlantic, in Africa, Asia, and South America.
Through those glory years the
English-Portuguese Alliance held firm, cemented by both nation’s rivalry with
and fear of rising united Spain.
A sixty year disruption of the
alliance occurred when the Spanish House
of Hapsburg established the Portuguese Philippine
Dynasty after the House of Aviz petered out. Philip
II of Spain assumed the Portuguese throne as Philip I of that country. Dynastic union meant a de
facto end of Portuguese independence and placed it in the camp of
England’s greatest enemy.
The Iberian
Union ended when the Portuguese rebelled against Philip III (Philip IV of
Spain) and set John, 8th Duke of
Braganza, a descendent of one line of the Aviz, on the throne as King John
IV. After the Portuguese Restoration War, 1640-1668 and the firm establishment of
Portuguese independence and the Restoration in England, the old
alliance was back in force as if it had never gone out effect.
Over the tumultuous centuries that
followed the alliance would be repeatedly invoked.
During the War of the Spanish Succession, 1701–1714 following the death of the
last Spanish Hapsburg, Charles II, Portugal
was initially aligned with France. But after the major English and Allied victory at the Battle of Blenheim, in which distant
Portugal was not directly involved at all, the traditional alliance was invoked and Portugal changed
sides. It actively joined a war in which it had previously been principally
an onlooker. Lisbon was opened to the Royal Navy and Austrian
Hapsburg Arch Duke Charles, crowned Spanish
King in Vienna, arrived in the
country to lead a large Allied army in an invasion of Spain to combat the
French backed Bourbon claimant. Portuguese
troops fought alongside the Austrians, English, other Allies, and Spanish
nobles who rallied to the cause. In the
end of the long and complicated war Bourbon Philip V did sit on the Spanish throne, Gibraltar was in the hands of the English, and the French lost much
of their holdings in North America and
Caribbean spice islands. The Portuguese gained the favor of the
ascending world power, England and the protection of its Navy for their
maritime trade.
During the Seven Years War, the world-wide
war ignited, as you might recall, by an attack by Virginia militia Colonel George Washington on French and native forces near present day Pittsburgh, the Spanish launched an
invasion of Portugal in 1762. The
English responded with thousands of troops reinforcing the Portuguese
army. The combined forces repeatedly
routed and nearly destroyed the Franco-Spanish
Army. In South
America the Spanish and Portuguese
fought to a virtual draw, but due
the disastrous defeat of Spain in Europe, Portugal was able to regain lost territories
and even claim some Spanish lands.
During the Napoleonic Wars, Portugal tried to maintain neutrality while
continuing to trade with England and her
colonies. In reprisal Spanish and French
forces again invaded, nearly overrunning the country and sending King John VI to seek refuge in the Viceroyalty of Brazil, transported by the Royal Navy. Portuguese forces and irregulars joined in the guerilla
campaign against the French, fought principally in Spain and supported the Duke of Wellington’s victorious
army. With Brazil the seat of the Empire during the war, its status and power grew. Eventually, in 1822 it would become an independent Kingdom when Regent Prince Dom Pedro refused to return to
the mother county and proclaimed himself
Emperor of Brazil.
In the tumultuous aftermath of the
Napoleonic wars, the Portuguese Civil
War erupted in 1828 caused by the rival claim to the throne by two
brothers, Dom Pedro of Brazil and Miguel. Neither Brazil nor Portugal desired a united crown so Dom Pedro relinquished his claim to his daughter Maria and a liberal Constitutional Council. Miguel, with the support of Portugal’s autocratic nobility and of France,
raised an army that bloodily defeated the liberals and instituted a notoriously
repressive five year rule by
Miguel. In 1832 Dom Pedro arrived via
London and landed a large army at Porto with the aid and protection of the
Royal Navy. The United Kingdom recognized Maria and the Liberals and were responding under the old treaties and
alliances. By 1834 Miguel was forced to
renounce his claim to the crown and Maria was restored.
A cartoon mocks John Bull as a bully threatening an old and enfeebled Portugal and it little King. |
The long cherished alliance was strained almost to the breaking point in 1890. Portugal
claimed a large swath of territory between its African colonies of Angola on
the west coast and Mozambique on the Indian Ocean on the basis of discovery,
exploration, and territorial
continuity. But the claims ran
counter to British interests,
particularly Cecil Rhodes’s powerful
British South Africa Company, the African Lakes Company and British missionaries—Protestant—operating in the region. The
British were near the height of their Imperial
power and nearly drunk with a sense of entitlement and invincibility. Egged on by
Rhodes and pressed at home by the Church
of England and Methodists who
were determined not only to save native
souls, but save them from Portuguese Catholicism,
the British government issued the Ultimatum
of 1890 demanding that the Portuguese evacuate
troops from key posts and effectively claimed sovereignty over the territory.
The ultimatum stated:
What Her Majesty’s Government require and insist upon is the
following: that telegraphic instructions shall be sent to the governor of
Mozambique at once to the effect that all and any Portuguese military forces
which are actually on the Shire or in the Makololo or in the Mashona territory
are to be withdrawn. Her Majesty’s Government considers that without this the
assurances given by the Portuguese Government are illusory. Mr. Petre [British legate in Lisbon] is compelled by his instruction to leave Lisbon at once
with all the members of his legation unless a satisfactory answer to this
foregoing intimation is received by him in, the course of this evening, and Her
Majesty's ship Enchantress is now at Vigo waiting for his orders.
That was a
none-to-veiled threat that Lisbon
would be shelled by the Royal Navy
unless it immediately acceded. The by
this time much weakened Portuguese had no choice to bow to the haughty British.
They were force to sign an 1890 Treaty
of London which ceded much of the disputed territory. But the Portuguese Parliament refused to ratify
it and popular street demonstrations
in Lisbon brought down the
government. Rhodes also opposed the
treaty because he coveted more territory.
He sent his private company
troops into the area and attacked Portuguese garrisons inflicting heavy
casualties. The British government bowed
to Rhodes demands and drafted a second treaty which gave Rhodes his land and compensated Portugal with remote
territory along the Zambesi River.
The
Portuguese people never forgave this national humiliation. It festered in public resentment for 20 years and was the primary cause of the Republican Revolution of 1910. That followed the assassination of un-popular King
Carlos I and his heir, Prince Luís
Filipe in 1908. The new republican government
was naturally hostile to the British.
When World War I broke out four years later
the Republican government was loath to come to the aid British and tried to maintain neutrality. But when the Germans attacked Portuguese East Africa the country had
to appeal for help from the British and troops based in South Africa. Once in the war Portugal even contributed
some troops to the Allies fighting
on the Western Front in France.
In
World War II Portugal once again
tried to maintain neutrality, with British approval. Both countries knew that Portugal’s entry
into the war would result in an invasion by Spain and Franco’s battle hardened and modern army and air forces
against which Portugal would have been helpless. That would have brought Spain into the war on
the side of the Axis. From total control of the Iberian
Peninsula, it would have poured troops into North Africa linking up with the Italians in Libya and
pushing south as well as east. The
British also prized neutral Portugal as a window
on an otherwise hostile continent
and a place from which to launch espionage
and covert operations. But in 1943 as German submarine warfare in the Battle of the Atlantic was wreaking
havoc with convoy operations supplying
beleaguered Britain. It invoked the old
alliance and was granted use of the Azores
for Naval operations and a base
for anti-submarine air patrols. In addition thousands of heavy bombers and transports refueled there on the way from North America to Britain.
In
the postwar years, Portugal and
Britain maintained a close relationship.
In 1959 Portugal joined the European
Free Trade Association (EFTA), a
British dominated alternative trade organization to what was then known as the Common Market which also included Austria, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland. In 1973 Britain
abandoned the EFTA and Portugal and Denmark followed it into the European Economic Community (EEC.)
When
India in 1961invaded Portuguese India, by then reduced to the coastal enclaves of Goa,
Daman, and Diu, it invoked the treaty and appealed for British aid. The British sensibly did not want to engage
in a war with its former colony,
which had one of the largest armies in the world. The best that they could do was offer
Portugal diplomatic support.
It
was Britain’s turn to invoke the alliance in 1982 when the Azores once again
offered support for the Royal Navy in the Falklands
War with Argentina. It has not been invoked for military
operations since.
But
Portugal has joined the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization and therefore its military and defense cooperation with Britain occurs mostly in that
context. Politically they are aligned
through membership in the European Union
as well.
The
Portuguese people rose up against draconian
austerity measures demanded by the European Union in exchange for some relief to its massive debt. Conservative British governments backed
EU pressure on hard-pressed states including not only Portugal but Spain,
Italy, and Greece. Portugal remained in
the EU after Brexit ending that
phase of political cooperation. But the
British believe that Portugal will be an early
target for negotiations on a new direct
nation-to-nation trade deal.
But
after 647 up and down years, the Anglo-Portuguese
Alliance remains in effect.
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