Tag: portugal

  • Christmas in Portugal: Traditions, Celebrations, and History

    Christmas in Portugal: Traditions, Celebrations, and History

    Christmas in Portugal begins on December 24 and continues until January 6. On Christmas Eve, the major Christmas event is a supper with family and friends, including Portuguese foods like bacalhau (salted fish). Desserts like rabanadas (akin to French toast), arroz doce (rice pudding), and Bolo Rei (a fruit and nut-filled cake) are also popular. After supper, Portuguese families gather to play games, socialize, and, at midnight, unwrap gifts. Midnight is the moment when local churches celebrate Missa do Galo, a mass for the devout. Another Christmas party is held on January 6 to round out the Christmas season.

    -> See also: 48 Countries That Celebrate Christmas Widely

    Christmas is Called “Natal” in Portugal

    Christmas is called “natal” in Portugal. The word “natal” in Portuguese was once “nātālis” in Latin, derived from the verb “nāscor,” which means to be born. From the Latin “nātālis,” the words “natale” in Italian, “noël” in French, “nadal” in Catalan, and “natal” in Spanish evolved. The Spanish word “natal” was gradually replaced by “navidad” as the name for the religious day. On the other hand, the word “Christmas” in English evolved from “Christes maesse” (‘Christ’s mass’), which means the mass of Christ.

    The Christmas Tree Tradition

    One of the world's largest Christmas trees in Praça do Comércio, Lisbon, Portugal.
    One of the world’s largest Christmas trees in Praça do Comércio, Lisbon, Portugal. (OsvaldoGago, cc by sa 3.0)

    The day to set up Christmas decorations varies in each country. In Portugal, it is customary to set up the Christmas tree on December 8th, the day of Our Lady of the Conception (Nossa Senhora da Conceição), the patroness of the Porteguese. On January 6th, the Day of the Kings (Dia de Reis) is celebrated, marking the arrival of the Three Wise Men (Três Reis Magos) in Bethlehem and concluding the magic of Christmas. On this day, Christmas trees and other Christmas decorations are taken down in Portugal. One of the world’s largest Christmas trees is located in Praça do Comércio, Lisbon.

    Christmas Traditions in Portugal

    A Christmas nativity scene in Portugal, Rio Tinto.
    A Christmas nativity scene in Portugal, Rio Tinto. (wuppertaler, cc by sa 4.0)

    Below are Portugal’s most beloved and traditional Christmas customs and celebrations:

    • Consoada (Christmas Eve): Boiling fish or octopus with potatoes and cabbage is a traditional Christmas Eve (Consoada) meal in Portugal. Families go to midnight mass after supper and then go home to set up their nativity scenes (presépios) with the infant Jesus.
    • Dia de Natal (Christmas Day): Portuguese Christmas dishes, like Bolo Rei (King Cake), rabanadas, and roasted lamb or goat, are enjoyed by families once again on Christmas Day. Morning gift opening is also not uncommon.
    • Christmas Decorations: Through mid-November, Portuguese cities are filled with Christmas markets selling artisan-made wares. Even though the country has one of the biggest Christmas trees in the world, displaying a Christmas tree is not typical in the country.
    • Presépios (Nativity Scenes): This country is home to a long-standing custom of nativity scenes, or “presépios,” which include placing figurines of the Three Kings in a house. While the Nativity plays are not as popular, the live nativity scenes where some citizens dress up as real characters are quite common.
    • Festive Fires: Lighting bonfires on Christmas Eve is a pagan ritual that continues in certain regions of Portugal as a way to greet the sun.
    • Careto de Varge: On December 26th, Portugal has a one-of-a-kind local festival honoring Velha, a rich old lady who gave the locals chestnuts and wine in return for a Christmas prayer.
    Christmas 2022 in Braga, Portugal.
    Christmas 2022 in Braga, Portugal. (Joseolgon, cc by sa 4.0)

    Pai Natal (Santa Claus) in Portugal

    When children in Portugal think of Santa Claus, they think of “Pai Natal,” and they think he brings gifts to them on Christmas Eve instead of Christmas Day. The families put their gifts in shoes and leave them by the fireplace or beneath the Christmas tree. On the other hand, there are those who believe that the baby Jesus, and not Pai Natal, brings the gifts. The names of Pai Natal’s reindeers in Portugal are Rodolfo, Corredora, Dançarina, Empinadora, Raposa, Cometa, Cupido, Trovão, Relâmpago e Bernardo.

    -> See also: All 15 Countries That Don’t Celebrate Christmas

    Christmas Foods and Drinks in Portugal

    Traditional Portuguese Christmas dinners are straightforward and include seafood and pork dishes that are prepared according to regional traditions. Here are the favorites from Portugal’s Christmas menu:

    • Bacalhau: Salted codfish, potatoes, and vegetables make up this traditional Portuguese Christmas feast.
    • Bacalhau com Todos: A meal that combines salted codfish with carrots, onions, potatoes, and other vegetables.
    • Polvo Assado: Traditional Christmas fare in Northern Portugal, a combination of roasted octopus and potatoes.
    • Roupa Velha: As a side dish, it is served with potatoes and veggies and is cooked using leftover codfish.
    • Cabrito Assado no Forno: A traditional Christmas meal, Cabrito Assado no Forno consists of oven-roasted lamb with roast potatoes.
    • Peru Recheado: Peru Recheado is a typical Portuguese Christmas meal that features pig and is accompanied by a fiery sauce.
    • Rabanadas: Fried dough pastries called rabanadas are accompanied with sugar or honey.
    • Lampreia de Ovos: It is a traditional Christmas dessert that has a fish-shaped egg-yolk cake.
    • Filhós: Traditionally eaten with a glass of Port wine or a liqueur such as ginjinha (sour cherry liqueur), it is a traditional Portuguese Christmas bread.
    • Arroz Doce: It is a sweet rice pudding that is cooked with sugar, cinnamon, almonds, and water.
    • Bolo Rei: With a classic pattern baked into the cake, this fruit cake is offered throughout Christmas.

    History of Christmas in Portugal

    Christmas decorations in Braga.
    Christmas decorations in Braga. (José Goncalves, cc by 3.0)

    In the nineteenth century, King Fernando II of Portugal and Queen Consort agreed to decorate the palace with a Christmas tree and distribute presents to the children while disguised as Saint Nicholas. This is the first known mention of a Christmas tree in Portugal. His native Germany was the source of this custom. “Dia de Reis,” or “Day of the Kings,” has been traditionally celebrated on January 6 for a long time to mark the official conclusion of the Christmas season in Portugal; however, this is no longer a holiday for many Portuguese families.

  • Carnation Revolution: The Fall of the Salazar Regime

    Carnation Revolution: The Fall of the Salazar Regime

    Midway through the 1970s, António de Oliveira Salazar established the Estado Novo, a dictatorship. Following Salazar’s departure in 1968, his successor, Marcelo Caetano, followed an open policy while refusing to give independence to the Portuguese colonies, particularly Angola and Mozambique. The colonial conflicts engulfed Portugal, resulting in the deaths of numerous troops.

    António de Spínola, deputy chief of staff of the armed forces, opposed the war, as did the young captains of the MFA (Movement of the Armed Forces). On the night of April 24 to April 25, 1974, the MFA staged a coup d’état, ending the Salazarist dictatorship. After two years, Portugal finally experienced political stability again in 1976, when democracy was restored.

    The Carnation Revolution was led mainly by a group of Portuguese officers, including Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho, Salgueiro Maia, and Vasco Lourenço. These officers played an important role in organizing the coup. Political figures such as Álvaro Cunhal, leader of the Portuguese Communist Party, and other civilian opposition leaders also supported the revolution.

    Causes of the Carnation Revolution

    For the soldiers in Lisbon, the carnation in the barrel of the rifle became a symbol of the revolution.
    For the soldiers in Lisbon, the carnation in the barrel of the rifle became a symbol of the revolution.

    After a military-led coup d’état in 1926, Portugal became a dictatorship. In 1933, a new constitution created the Estado Novo (“New State”), an authoritarian government led by António de Oliveira Salazar. Prior to that year, Portugal was ruled by the Ditadura Nacional (National Dictatorship).

    Political opposition movements were not tolerated by the anti-democratic, corporatist, and Catholic dictatorships. The Council of Ministers served as the ultimate authority. Strikes were outlawed and labor unions were controlled by the government. The International and State Defense Police, the regime’s police force, monitored and suppressed political opponents. The Estado Novo was founded on the same colonial principles. Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau were all colonies of Portugal.

    In 1961, the Portuguese military was sent into the colonies to quell independence aspirations. Salazar had a stroke in 1968. He was replaced as president by Marcelo Caetano. Meanwhile, the Portuguese army lost numerous men to the ongoing colonial battles. Soldiers like António de Spnola urged the government to engage with independence fighters because they believed they had lost the battle in the colonies. Portuguese officers organized the decolonization-supporting MFA (Movement of the Armed Forces) in 1973. The MFA orchestrated the coup known as the “Carnation Revolution” on April 25, 1974.

    Salazar’s Dictatorship

    António de Oliveira Salazar
    António de Oliveira Salazar. Image: Manuel Alves San Payo.

    The authoritarian system headed by António de Oliveira Salazar, President of the Council of Ministers since 1932, is often referred to as the Salazarist dictatorship. Estado Novo (literally “New State”) was a dictatorship that took power in 1933. Anti-communism, anti-socialism, anti-syndicalism, anti-liberalism—these were the tenets upon which it was founded. But it maintained some distance from fascism. The affluent landowners, bankers, and manufacturers of Estado Novo backed a corporatist, anti-democratic administration. “God, Fatherland, and Family” was the organization’s official motto.

    There was just one legal political party, the National Union, which emerged in 1930. Trade unions and independent publications were also banned, along with the Portuguese Communist Party. The police of the dictatorship, who also engaged in censorship, detained dissidents. Salazar was a Catholic who signed a document expanding the Church’s authority in 1940 called the Concordat. The Salazarist regime also advocated a return to colonial ways of thinking.

    Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau were all Portuguese colonies that the country fought hard to maintain in the 1960s. Salazar had a stroke in 1968. Marcelo Caetano, the leader of Estado Novo, succeeded him in office. In an effort to liberalize the nation, Caetano enacted a number of changes. He ignored mounting pressure from the military to end the conflict in the colonies, though.

    Leading Figures of the Carnation Revolution

    Carnation Revolution: The Fall of the Salazar Regime
    A crowd celebrates on a Panhard EBR armoured car in Lisbon, 25 April 1974. Image: Wikimedia.

    Officers from the Portuguese army were behind the Carnation Revolution. As early as 1961, Portuguese armed forces intervened in Angola, Mozambique, and Guinea-Bissau to suppress independence movements. The Salazarist dictatorship wanted to maintain power in these “overseas provinces”. Faced with resistance from the independence movement, Portugal was forced to send more and more troops. By the early 1970s, casualties were high, and Portuguese troop morale was at an all-time low. Officers, including António de Spínola, the governor and commander of the armed forces in Guinea, tried to prove to the President of the Council, Marcelo Caetano, that the war was lost.

    Caetano refused to negotiate with the independenceists. In 1973, a group of officers formed the MFA (Mouvement des Forces Armées—Movement of the Armed Forces) and initially strongly opposed a decree granting militias access to professional officer status. Composed mostly of young army captains, the MFA organized and called for an end to the war in the colonies.

    In February 1974, António de Spínola’s book “Portugal and the Future” was published along these lines. On April 25, 1974, the MFA organized a coup d’état. And where were the carnations in all this? On that day, the army, supported by part of the population, gathered in Lisbon’s flower market. They were presented with red carnations by local shopkeepers and placed the flowers in the barrels of their rifles. It was this gesture that gave the events the name “Carnation Revolution”.

    The Carnation Revolution is celebrated every year on April 25 as a national holiday in Portugal, known as “Dia da Liberdade” (Freedom Day). It is commemorated with various events, parades, and ceremonies throughout the country. The red carnation remains a symbol of the peaceful nature of the revolution and its role in bringing democracy to Portugal.

    April 1974 Coup d’état in its Phases

    1974 Carnation Revolution in Portugal, Fernando José Salgueiro Maia
    Graffiti of the icon of the 1974 Carnation Revolution in Portugal, Fernando José Salgueiro Maia, on a Lisbon wall to commemorate upcoming 40th anniversary of this event. Image: Wikimedia.

    MFA soldiers launched the coup on the night of April 24, 1974. The song Grândola, Vila Morena, forbidden by the regime, was broadcast on the radio after midnight on April 25. The uprising soldiers prepared to take control of the country’s vital points.

    1. At 3 a.m., they took control of the Lisbon airport, the radio station, then the military headquarters and the Porto airport.
    2. At 4.26 a.m., the MFA issued its first communiqué over the radio, calling on the police to stay in their barracks and asking the population to stay in their homes. Other communiqués issued in the following hours warned various military and police forces that any act of resistance against the MFA would be violently suppressed.
    3. At 5.30 a.m., Captain Salgueiro Maia laid siege to Lisbon’s famous square, Terreiro do Paço. He surrounded the main barracks of the city gendarmerie, where the President of the Council, Marcelo Caetano, had taken refuge.
    4. It is 16:00 when he surrenders on the condition that António de Spínola regains power. The MFA agrees.
    5. At 5.45pm, Spínola arrives.
    6. Then, at 7.30, Caetano Pontinha is taken to the command center.
    7. At 8 o’clock, PIDE (Estado Novo’s secret police) opens fire on the crowd, killing four people. This was the only act of resistance to the revolution. After Spínola’s intervention, PIDE agreed to surrender.
    8. At 1:30 a.m. on April 26, the members of the Junta de Salvação Nacional (National Salvation Junta) were introduced on television. This group of officers, headed by Spínola, was given the task of temporarily governing Portugal.

    Consequences of the Carnation Revolution

    The Carnation Revolution overthrew the Salazarist dictatorship. Portugal entered a period known as the “Ongoing Revolutionary Process (Processo Revolucionário Em Curso)”. For two years, the country was ruled by the Junta de Salvação Nacional. While Marcelo Caetano was exiled to Brazil, political prisoners were released, and dissidents returned to the country. However, the left-leaning MFA disagreed with António de Spínola, who advocated a return to the old institutions.

    After the failure of the first provisional government in May 1974, the MFA wanted to limit Spínola’s actions. Spínola resigned and took part in the failed coup d’état on March 11, 1975. Meanwhile, the former Portuguese colonies gained their independence and the colonists were repatriated to Portugal. The MFA, supported by the far left, nationalized banks, insurance companies, and other sectors such as the steel industry. But it faced off against moderates who seized power at the end of 1975. Portugal adopted a new constitution on April 2, 1976, and became a democracy.