
audiobook
by Sociedade de Geografia de Lisboa
Nota de editor: Devido à existência de erros tipográficos neste texto, foram tomadas várias decisões quanto à versão final. Em caso de dúvida, a grafia foi mantida de acordo com o original. No final deste livro encontrará a lista de erros corrigidos.
Sociedade de Geographia de Lisboa
A late‑19th‑century petition from Lisbon’s Society of Geography lays out a spirited debate over the future of Portugal’s overseas holdings. Framed as a formal address to the Crown, the document reacts to growing pressure to hand vast portions of Mozambique to powerful trading firms, arguing that such “magestatic” concessions would blur the line between private profit and sovereign authority. The writers invoke constitutional principles, economic prudence, and a vision of national development, insisting that the state must retain direct control while still encouraging private investment under clear, regulated terms.
The appeal is both a legal critique and a call to action, urging the government to foster infrastructure, agriculture, mining, and communication projects without surrendering core jurisdictional powers. By weaving together concerns about political inconvenience, economic error, and the moral duty of the nation, the Society’s stance captures a pivotal moment when colonial policy, commercial ambition, and emerging ideas of national responsibility collided. Listeners will hear a vivid snapshot of the era’s diplomatic language and the earnest desire to shape Portugal’s colonial future.
Full title
As concessões de direitos magestaticos a emprezas mercantis para o ultramar representações ao governo representações ao governo
Language
pt
Duration
~39 minutes (37K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rita Farinha and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by National Library of Portugal (Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal).)
Release date
2008-11-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Founded in Lisbon in 1875, this long-running learned society helped shape Portugal’s geographical studies and public debates about exploration and overseas expansion. Its story is closely tied to the intellectual and political world of late 19th-century Portugal.
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