
audiobook
A mid‑nineteenth‑century engineering report confronts a problem that still haunts river valleys today: the relentless flooding of the Mondego and its impact on the surrounding countryside. Drawing on vivid accounts of the Seine, the Rhône and other European rivers, the author shows how centuries of hillside cultivation have turned once‑steady streams into unpredictable torrents, threatening fields, livestock and the livelihoods of countless farmers.
From the perspective of an army officer trained in hydrography, the memorandum blends careful observation with historical research, citing royal edicts from the 1400s that already warned against deforestation on the river’s slopes. It outlines practical measures—re‑forestation, riverbank reinforcement and wiser land‑use policies—that could curb the damage while keeping costs manageable. The writer’s modest ambition is clear: to spark governmental action and provide a useful guide for those charged with protecting the region’s agriculture.
Listeners will find a compelling mix of scientific reasoning, historical intrigue and a sincere plea for stewardship, offering insight into how early engineers grappled with the balance between human activity and the natural world.
Language
pt
Duration
~22 minutes (21K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rita Farinha, Alberto Manuel Brandão Simões and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2012-11-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

b. 1821
Best known for a witty, street-level classic of Brazilian literature, this 19th-century writer brought the bustle of Rio de Janeiro to life with unusual humor and realism. His work has endured for generations thanks to its lively characters and sharp eye for everyday society.
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