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1 Pedro I, king
(1320-1367)The eighth king of Portugal and fourth son of King Afonso IV and Beatriz of Castile. His first marriage as prince and heir was to a daughter of a Castilian hidalgo (in Portuguese, fidalgo), Constança Manuel. In Constanca's retinue from Spain came the alluring lady-in-waiting, Dona Inês de Castro, a Gallician of Castilian stock. The notorious love affair between Inês and Pedro soon sparked a bitter conflict between Pedro and his father. Fearing the threat of Castilian intervention in Portuguese affairs using Ines's connection with Pedro, Afonso ordered the murder of Inês in 1355. Reacting to this tragedy, Pedro rebelled and went to war against his father, although a truce was called after a short period. Afonso died in 1357. Pedro became noted, during his brief reign of a decade, for avoiding war and for a record of even-handed justice. The legend that Pedro disint erred the corpse of Inês de Castro and proclaimed it queen grew up after Pedro's death in 1367 and became a popular theme in European literature centuries later. -
2 llamado
Del verbo llamar: ( conjugate llamar) \ \
llamado es: \ \el participioMultiple Entries: llamado llamar
llamado 1
◊ -da adjetivo1 ( por un nombre) called; el 747, también llamado `jumbo' the 747, also known as the jumbo jet; el llamado `boom' de los sesenta the so-called `boom' of the sixties 2 (a la fama, éxito) See Also→ destinado 1a
llamado 2 sustantivo masculinob) (Arg) (Telec) See Also→◊ llamada
llamar ( conjugate llamar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹bomberos/policía› to call; ‹ médico› to call (out); ‹camarero/criada/ascensor› to call; ‹súbditos/servidores› to summon; ‹ taxi› ( por teléfono) to call; ( en la calle) to hail; el sindicato los llamó a la huelga the union called them out on strike 2 ( por teléfono) to phone, to call; llamado a algn al celular (AmL) or (Esp) al móvil to call sb on their cell phone (AmE) o mobile (BrE) 3 (dar el título, apodo de) to call verbo intransitivo 1 ( con los nudillos) to knock; ( tocar el timbre) to ring (the doorbell); 2 (Telec) [ persona] to telephone, phone, call; [ teléfono] to ring;◊ ¿quién llama? who's calling?;ver tb cobro b llamarse verbo pronominal to be called; ¿cómo te llamas? what's your name?
llamado,-a adjetivo so-called
llamar
I verbo transitivo
1 to call
2 (telefonear) to call up, phone, ring: la llamé esta mañana, I rang her this morning
3 (suscitar vocación, interés) to appeal
llamar la atención, to attract attention
4 (por un nombre de pila) to name (por un apodo, mote, diminutivo) to call
II vi (con los nudillos) to knock (con el timbre) to ring ' llamado' also found in these entries: Spanish: llamada - alguien - aún - preocupar English: aptly - hotly - lop-eared - so-called - appeal - call - draft - name - so - summons - their -
3 llama
llama n llama
Del verbo llamar: ( conjugate llamar) \ \
llama es: \ \3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativoMultiple Entries: llama llamar
llama sustantivo femenino 1 ( de fuego) flame; llama piloto pilot light 2 (Zool) llama
llamar ( conjugate llamar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹bomberos/policía› to call; ‹ médico› to call (out); ‹camarero/criada/ascensor› to call; ‹súbditos/servidores› to summon; ‹ taxi› ( por teléfono) to call; ( en la calle) to hail; el sindicato los llamó a la huelga the union called them out on strike 2 ( por teléfono) to phone, to call; llama a algn al celular (AmL) or (Esp) al móvil to call sb on their cell phone (AmE) o mobile (BrE) 3 (dar el título, apodo de) to call verbo intransitivo 1 ( con los nudillos) to knock; ( tocar el timbre) to ring (the doorbell); 2 (Telec) [ persona] to telephone, phone, call; [ teléfono] to ring;◊ ¿quién llama? who's calling?;ver tb cobro b llamarse verbo pronominal to be called; ¿cómo te llamas? what's your name?
llama sustantivo femenino flame Locuciones: en llamas, ablaze
llamar
I verbo transitivo
1 to call
2 (telefonear) to call up, phone, ring: la llamé esta mañana, I rang her this morning
3 (suscitar vocación, interés) to appeal
llamar la atención, to attract attention
4 (por un nombre de pila) to name (por un apodo, mote, diminutivo) to call
II vi (con los nudillos) to knock (con el timbre) to ring ' llama' also found in these entries: Spanish: bar - bombera - bombero - chimenea - constructor - constructora - fútbol - interés - llamarse - ocho - política - soflama - atención - igual - instante - llamar - saber - tanto - tembloroso - trémulo - vivo English: anybody - appeal - call - caller - die - female - flame - get - granddaughter - inconspicuous - llama - name - ninth - smoulder - spectacle - any - doubt - know - smolder - stuff - suppose - them - whattr['lɑːmə]1 SMALLZOOLOGY/SMALL llamallama ['lɑmə, 'jɑ-] n: llama fn.• llama (Animal) s.f.'lɑːmənoun llama f['lɑːmǝ]N llama f* * *['lɑːmə]noun llama f -
4 llamar
llamar ( conjugate llamar) verbo transitivo 1 ‹bomberos/policía› to call; ‹ médico› to call (out); ‹camarero/criada/ascensor› to call; ‹súbditos/servidores› to summon; ‹ taxi› ( por teléfono) to call; ( en la calle) to hail; el sindicato los llamó a la huelga the union called them out on strike 2 ( por teléfono) to phone, to call; llamar a algn al celular (AmL) or (Esp) al móvil to call sb on their cell phone (AmE) o mobile (BrE) 3 (dar el título, apodo de) to call verbo intransitivo 1 ( con los nudillos) to knock; ( tocar el timbre) to ring (the doorbell); 2 (Telec) [ persona] to telephone, phone, call; [ teléfono] to ring;◊ ¿quién llama? who's calling?;ver tb cobro b llamarse verbo pronominal to be called; ¿cómo te llamas? what's your name?
llamar
I verbo transitivo
1 to call
2 (telefonear) to call up, phone, ring: la llamé esta mañana, I rang her this morning
3 (suscitar vocación, interés) to appeal
llamar la atención, to attract attention
4 (por un nombre de pila) to name (por un apodo, mote, diminutivo) to call
II vi (con los nudillos) to knock (con el timbre) to ring ' llamar' also found in these entries: Spanish: atención - avisar - cantar - cobro - dejar - eh - encargarse - GEO - instancia - más - molestarse - nombre - ocurrirse - orden - palmada - pan - retraer - show - sin - sudaca - timbre - titular2 - tratar - amenazar - bombero - golpear - intuir - licitar - mandar - oír - puerta - tal - teléfono - tocar English: alternatively - attention - attract - beckon - call - call in - call out - call up - collect - dispose - draw - engage - entitle - eye - for - get in - hail - have in - knock - name - ought - page - reverse - ring - ring back - ring up - send for - spade - telephone - certainly - conspicuous - draft - effect - get - good - kind - more - muster - phone - radio - recall - send - summon - use -
5 Miguel I, king
(1802-1866)The third son of King João VI and of Dona Carlota Joaquina, Miguel was barely five years of age when he went to Brazil with the fleeing royal family. In 1821, with his mother and father, he returned to Portugal. Whatever the explanation for his actions, Miguel always took Carlota Joaquina's part in the subsequent political struggles and soon became the supreme hope of the reactionary, clerical, absolutist party against the constitutionalists and opposed any compromise with liberal constitutionalism or its adherents. He became not only the symbol but the essence of a kind of reactionary messianism in Portugal during more than two decades, as his personal fortunes of power and privilege rose and fell. With his personality imbued with traits of wildness, adventurism, and violence, Miguel enjoyed a life largely consumed in horseback riding, love affairs, and bull- fighting.After the independence of Brazil (1822), Miguel became the principal candidate for power of the Traditionalist Party, which was determined to restore absolutist royal power, destroy the constitution, and rule without limitation. Miguel was involved in many political conspiracies and armed movements, beginning in 1822 and including the coups known to history as the "Vila Francada" (1823) and the "Abrilada" (1824), which were directed against his father King João VI, in order to restore absolutist royal power. These coup conspiracies failed due to foreign intervention, and the king ordered Miguel dismissed from his posts and sent into exile. He remained in exile for four years. The death of King João VI in 1826 presented new opportunities in the absolutist party, however, and the dashing Dom Miguel remained their great hope for power.His older brother King Pedro IV, then emperor of Brazil, inherited the throne and wrote his own constitution, the Charter of 1826, which was to become the law of the land in Portugal. However, his daughter Maria, only seven, was too young to rule, so Pedro, who abdicated, put together an unusual deal. Until Maria reached her majority age, a regency headed by Princess Isabel Maria would rule Portugal. Dom Miguel would return from his Austrian exile and, when Maria reached her majority, Maria would marry her uncle Miguel and they would reign under the 1826 Charter. Miguel returned to Portugal in 1828, but immediately broke the bargain. He proclaimed himself an absolutist King, acclaimed by the usual (and last) Cortes of 1828; dispensed with Pedro's Charter; and ruled as an absolutist. Pedro's response was to abdicate the emperorship of Brazil, return to Portugal, defeat Miguel, and place his young daughter on the throne. In the civil war called the War of the Brothers (1831-34), after a seesaw campaign on land and at sea, Miguel's forces were defeated and he went into exile, never to return to Portugal. -
6 Maria II, queen
(1811-1853)Born Maria da Glória, daughter of Pedro IV of Portugal (Pedro I of Brazil) and his first wife, Archduchess Leopoldina of Austria, in Rio de Janeiro, the future queen was named regent at age seven, on the death of King João VI (1826). By an agreement, her father Pedro abdicated the throne of Portugal on her behalf with the understanding that she would marry her uncle Dom Miguel, who in turn was pledged to accept a constitutional charter written by Pedro himself. Backed by the absolutist party, including his reactionary mother Queen Carlota Joaquina, Dom Miguel returned from his Austrian exile in 1828 and proceeded to scrap the 1826 charter of Pedro and rule as absolutist king of Portugal, placing the nine-year-old Maria da Glória in the political wilderness.Emperor Pedro I of Brazil (who had been Pedro IV of Portugal before he abdicated in Maria's favor) responded by deciding to fight for his daughter's cause and for the restoration of the 1826 charter. Maria's constitutional monarchy, throne, and cause were at the center of the War of the Brothers, a tragic civil war from 1831 to 1834. With foreign assistance from Great Britain, Pedro's army and fleet prevailed over the Miguelite forces by 1834. By the Convention of Évora-Monte, signed by generals of Miguel and Pedro, Miguel surrendered unconditionally, peace was assured, and Miguel went into exile.At age 15, Maria da Glória was proclaimed queen of Portugal, but her personal life was tragic and her reign a stormy one. Within months of the victory of her constitutionalist cause, her chief advocate and counselor, her father Pedro, died of tuberculosis. Her all too brief reign was consumed in childbirth (she died bearing her 11th child in 1853 at age 34) and in ruling Portugal during one of the modern era's most disturbed phases. During her time on the throne, there were frequent military insurrections and interventions in politics, various revolutions, the siege of Oporto, the Patuleia revolt and civil war, the Maria da Fonte uprising, rebellion of leading military commanders (marshals), and economic troubles. Maria was a talented monarch, and helped raise and educate her oldest son Pedro, who succeeded her as King Pedro V, one of Portugal's most remarkable rulers of recent centuries. Late in her reign, the constitutional monarchy system settled down, enjoyed greater stability, and began the so-called " Regeneration" era of economic development and progress.
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