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  1. Isabel of Barcelos (October 1402 – 26 October 1466), also known as Isabel of Braganza, was a lady of the Portuguese nobility during the Late Middle Ages. She was the daughter of Afonso I, Duke of Braganza and Beatriz Pereira de Alvim, and she married Infante John, Lord of Reguengos de Monsaraz, her half-uncle, son of John I of ...

  2. Isabel de Bragança e Pereira ou Isabel de Bragança, também conhecida como Isabel de Barcelos (Barcelos, outubro de 1402? — Arévalo, 26 de outubro de 1465 [1]), foi uma nobre portuguesa, filha de Afonso I, Duque de Bragança e 8.º conde de Barcelos e de Beatriz Pereira de Alvim, além de ser neta de Nuno Álvares Pereira ...

  3. Isabel de Bragança e Pereira ou Isabel de Bragança, também conhecida como Isabel de Barcelos (Barcelos, outubro de 1402? — Arévalo, 26 de outubro de 1465 [1]), foi uma nobre portuguesa, filha de Afonso I, Duque de Bragança e 8.º conde de Barcelos e de Beatriz Pereira de Alvim, além de ser neta de Nuno Álvares Pereira, condestável do ...

    • Early Life
    • Upbringing
    • Regent
    • Abolitionism and Golden Law
    • Exile
    • Legacy
    • Titles and Honors
    • Genealogy

    Birth

    Isabel was born at 6:30 p.m. on 29 July 1846 in Rio de Janeiro's Paço de São Cristóvão (Palace of Saint Christopher). She was the daughter of Brazil's Emperor Pedro II and his wife Teresa Cristina. On 15 November the infant princess was baptized in an elaborate ceremony in Igreja da Glória (Church of Glory). Her godparents, both represented by proxy, were her uncle, King Ferdinand II of Portugal, and her maternal grandmother María Isabella of Spain.She was christened Isabel Cristina Leopoldin...

    Heir to the throne

    The early death of both of his sons had an enormous impact on Pedro II. Aside from his personal grief, the loss of his sons affected his future conduct as monarch and would determine the fate of the Empire. In the Emperor's eyes, the deaths of his children seemed to portend an eventual end of the Imperial system. The future of the monarchy as an institution no longer concerned him, as he increasingly saw his position as being nothing more than that of Head of State for his lifetime. The Emper...

    Education

    Isabel began her education on 1 May 1854, when she was taught how to read and write by a male instructor, who was openly republican. As the Portuguese (and later Brazilian) court tradition demanded, the heir of the throne was supposed to have an aio (supervisor, tutor or governess) in charge of his education once he achieved the age of seven. After a long search, Pedro II chose the Brazilian-born Luísa Margarida Portugal de Barros, the Countess of Barral, daughter of a Brazilian noble and wif...

    Domestic life

    Pedro II's behavior as a father was completely different as an emperor. A "man remarkable for his self-control, was at his most affectionate and most outgoing with children, above all his daughters." His daughters, "whom I love deeply", as Pedro II wrote in his diary in 1861, "both loved and admired him." He "was a strict father who demanded obedience", but who, at the same time, was very kind and concerned with his children.However, Pedro II "found difficult if not impossible" to grant intim...

    Marriage

    Isabel was short, had blue eyes, blond hair, was a little overweight and lacked eyebrows. Her father sought a match among the royal house of France (fellow agnates of Robert II of France), and initially Pierre, Duke of Penthièvre, the son of the Prince of Joinville, was considered. His mother was Isabel's aunt Princess Francisca of Brazil. Pierre, however, was not interested and declined. Instead, Joinville suggested his nephews, Gaston, Count of Eu, and Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg an...

    First regency

    Gaston and Isabel returned to Brazil on 1 May 1871, just three weeks before the Emperor and Empress embarked on their own tour of Europe. Isabel was appointed regent with full powers to govern Brazil in the Emperor's absence, though prime minister José Paranhos, Viscount of Rio Branco, and Gaston were expected to hold the reins of power in reality. Following the abolition of slavery in the United States, Pedro II was committed to a gradual program of liberation. On 27 September 1871, with the...

    Second regency

    The Emperor embarked on a major tour of North America, Europe and the Middle East in March 1876, and Isabel was again made regent. Elections later in the year returned the incumbent government (led by the Duke of Caxias) but fraud and violence during the campaign damaged both its and Isabel's reputations. Her popularity also suffered as a result of continued tension between the Church and State. Adding to her stress, she miscarried on 11 September 1876, and was weakened by loss of blood. At t...

    From November 1884 to March 1885, Isabel toured southern Brazil with her husband, and in January 1887, they left Brazil for a six-month visit to Europe. Their trip was cut short, however, as Pedro II fell ill in March, and they returned in early June. The Emperor was advised to seek medical help in Europe, as a result of which he left Brazil on 30 ...

    Republican coup d'état

    In August 1888, to Isabel's relief, Pedro II returned from Europe and her regency ended.Gaston wrote: With the Emperor ill and Isabel withdrawn from public life, no effort was made to capitalize on the public popularity engendered by the end of slavery. They had lost the support of slave-owning plantation owners, who held great political, economic and social power. Isabel was uninterested in politics and did not cultivate politicians or public support. Her religious zeal was distrusted, and i...

    Later years

    The imperial family arrived at Lisbon on 7 December 1889. Three weeks later, Isabel's mother died at Porto, while Isabel and her family were in southern Spain. Back in Portugal, Isabel fainted at her mother's lying in state. Further bad news came from Brazil, as the new government abolished the imperial family's allowances, their only substantial source of income, and declared the family banished. On the back of a large loan from a Portuguese businessman, the imperial family moved into the Ho...

    Historian Roderick J. Barman wrote that "in the view of posterity, [Isabel] acted decisively only once on a single issue: the immediate abolition of slavery".It is for this achievement that she is remembered. As explained by Barman, paradoxically this "principal exercise of power by which posterity alone remembers her ... contributed to her exclusi...

    Titles and styles

    1. 29 July 1846 – 11 June 1847: Her HighnessThe Princess Dona Isabel of Brazil 2. 11 June 1847 – 19 July 1848: Her Imperial HighnessThe Princess Imperial 3. 19 July 1848 – 9 January 1850: Her HighnessThe Princess Dona Isabel of Brazil 4. 9 January 1850 – 14 November 1921: Her Imperial Highness The Princess Imperial 4.1. 15 October 1864 – 14 November 1921: signed her private letters as "Isabel, Condessa d'Eu" 4.2. 1871–72, 1876–77, 1887–88: Her Imperial HighnessThe Princess Imperial Regent The...

    Honors

    Princess Isabel was a recipient of the following Brazilian orders: 1. Grand Cross of the Order of Christ 2. Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Benedict of Aviz 3. Grand Cross of the Order of Saint James of the Sword 4. Grand Cross of the Order of the Southern Cross 5. Grand Cross of the Order of Pedro I 6. Grand Cross of the Order of the Rose She was a recipient of the following foreign honors: 1. Band of the Spanish Order of Queen Maria Luisa, 2 January 1855 2. Band of the Portuguese Order of...

    Issue

    Isabel's marriage with Gaston produced three sons and one daughter. The eldest son, who was named after her father, as the firstborn son of the heiress presumptive, was given the title of Prince of Grão Pará. Isabel's children were 1. Dona Luísa Vitória de Orléans e Bragança (1874–1874) (stillborn), 2. Dom Pedro de Alcântara de Orléans e Bragança(1875–1940), 3. Dom Luís de Orléans e Bragança(1878–1920), 4. Dom Antônio de Orléans e Bragança(1881–1918).

  4. Isabel de Barcelos ( Barcelos, octubre de 1402- Arévalo, 26 de octubre de 1465), conocida con el nombre de Isabel de Braganza o Isabel de Barcelos por el condado utilizado por sus padres originalmente, fue una noble portuguesa, hija del duque Alfonso I de Braganza y de su primera esposa Beatriz Pereira de Alvim 1 y, por tanto, nieta por vía pa...

  5. Isabel of Barcelos (October 1402 – 26 October 1466), also known as Isabel of Braganza, was a lady of the Portuguese nobility during the Late Middle Ages. She was the daughter of Afonso I, Duke of Braganza and Beatriz Pereira de Alvim, and she married Infante John, Lord of Reguengos de Monsaraz, her half-uncle, son of John I of Portugal.

  6. Isabel of Barcelos. Isabella of Portugal ( Isabel in Portuguese and Spanish) (1428 – 15 August 1496) was Queen of Castile and León as the second wife of King John II. She was the mother of Queen Isabella I of Castile .