In general, Portugal is sort of the “forgotten” part of Europe, even for all the colonies it had.
@PeakPeakPeakPeakPeak2 жыл бұрын
Sadly kinda true
@benjaminobienu52972 жыл бұрын
@@PeakPeakPeakPeakPeak Yeah it is because Portgual is kind of a small country and I don't why Spain just annex it since it a small country.
@GandalftheWise2 жыл бұрын
@@benjaminobienu5297 they tried but many Spaniards were killed by the Portuguese man of war jellyfish
@benjaminobienu52972 жыл бұрын
@@GandalftheWise By actual jellyfishes? That is what stop the Spaniards from conquering Portugal? I never jellyfishes save Portgual from being invaded Spain. How knew but is jellyfishes or warship name the Portuguese jellyfish? Am I wrong? Was it actually jellyfish, or is it warships? But thanks for that little reminder, for it helps a lot now, and I didn't know Portugal was saved by jellyfishes from Spain.
@GandalftheWise2 жыл бұрын
@@benjaminobienu5297 yep look up man of war jellyfish and look how deadly they are
@shadowmatt69282 жыл бұрын
Another reason why Salazar was forgotten was in large part he didnt like being in the public spotlight. He wasnt charismatic like Franco was, and was quite shy in comparison. That and the Spanish civil war was a huge geo political moment in history so much so that foriegn nations were watching it closely. Good vid btw.
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
He did go out a bit initially, going to Mass and meeting folks around his house but then there was an assassination attempt. I think it was like a decade maybe later until he came out, with rumours of marriage as he met a lady and he had always said marriage and rule was incompatible. It fell through although I think he adopted two girls.
@DiogoGaming2 Жыл бұрын
And we are happy that he was, 25th of april forever
@staygolden9264 Жыл бұрын
mainly forgotten because the modern education system doesnt allow GOOD dictators to be Recognized. Unless theres oil there of course.
@Ussonan-Foderation201611 ай бұрын
Made this 420 likes
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
He didn't? Why was his picture all over the place? Ele não tinha dinheiro porque a cena dele era o poder
@janicerich49377 ай бұрын
An interesting fact about Salazar that everyone should know is that he is perhaps the only dictator (in modern history at least) that died poor. That's unreal to me. He was in power for 36 years, that's the better part of half of a century, and he never once in that time abused his power to enrich himself, he never fell into the temptation. When he was in his deathbed the government had to pay for his medicine because his bank account was nearly empty. Another fun fact, in the early 2000's there was a Portuguese TV show to vote on who was the greatest Portuguese of all time, and Salazar won.
@brunods45602 ай бұрын
You forget to mention the fact he wasn't poor, really. He didn't even come from poor background either. Also forget to mention that salazar indulge in lobbying, favores, jobs for the boys, used state means for his own benefits, was corruption in many documeted ways, brake the laws himself made, etc... The only thing people can say about salazar is that he didn't Enrico himself by being a dictator. But then again, neither do most politician. As that would be a crime.
@janicerich49372 ай бұрын
@@brunods4560 That's just blatantly false? Salazar by all accounts was born into a modest income family in the late 1800s, he wasn't rich by any means, and all your other claims seem to be nothing more than unsubstantiated charges, but if you can provide me with some proof or sources to them I'll be more than happy to read into it. And lol, what do you mean most politicians don't make themselves rich? LITERALLY the 3 last prime ministers of Portugal (Antonio Costa, Passos Coelho, and José Socrates) are ALL involved in corruption and money laundering scandals.
@thegoodfriend62475 күн бұрын
@@janicerich4937 You shouldn't answer to an exagetaration with an exageration in turn. Only Sócrates is facing very serious charges of corruption.
@janicerich49375 күн бұрын
@@thegoodfriend6247 That's wrong, though. All of three are involved in corruption scandals. Costa is involved in many scandals and corruption, from TAP in 2022 to the infamous Operação Influencer that made him have to resign. Passos Coelho was involved in a scandal for not paying his taxes for who knows how long (he of course claims he didn't know of it, but c'mon he's a university professor and been involved in politics since at least the early 90s, are we supposed to pretend he didn't have an accountant?), and that's just what we know of.
@janicerich49373 күн бұрын
@@thegoodfriend6247 Antonio Costa had to resign because he was being investigated due to Operação Influencer, which was dealing with corruption that he was a part of. Passos Coelho mas under investigation for tax fraud. All of these are corruption cases.
@llewcunedda45282 жыл бұрын
Salazar Slytherin from Harry Potter was named after him. Rowling lived in Portugal teaching English for quite some time.
@eaturcookiescookie7462 Жыл бұрын
Damn, all the members of Chega! Will be joining slytherin in the new Harry Potter game 😳
@miguelpadeiro762 Жыл бұрын
@@eaturcookiescookie7462 They began boycotting Slytherin when it started accepting gypsies/roma in the house😡😡😡😡😡😡
@eaturcookiescookie7462 Жыл бұрын
@@miguelpadeiro762 thinks a classified Chega! Classic
@okapa Жыл бұрын
Who the f cares.
@urielcosta5003 Жыл бұрын
Also Hogwarts uniforms are inspired by portuguese academic uniforms
@wolfgang6517 Жыл бұрын
Salazar was a product of the Portuguese First Republic more than anything. His entire ideology (and even the way he ran the Estado Novo) was a reflection of his personal experience in the 1st Republic. I think that most people forget that aspect when analyzing him and his views.
@aaronTGP_3756 Жыл бұрын
Salazar woke up after a month and regained his lucidity. This was after he was removed from power. Instead of tell him the truth, his former inner circle pretended Salazar was still Prime Minister, and convinced him to stay in his room to "rule" in private. So when Salazar approached death, he still thought he was in charge.
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
he knew that he was not ruling the country anymore....
@aaronTGP_3756 Жыл бұрын
@@br3menPT How would he know ifhe was shut in his home and was never told about his removal?
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
@@aaronTGP_3756 precisely for that. He no longer had his usual routines...meetings with ministers. Status of the war in the overseas provinces..
@almounasaddiyeh8685 Жыл бұрын
oh! what a plot, incredible indeed, thanks for sharing.
@ak43darkhell Жыл бұрын
@@br3menPTwhat I heard he was not the guy that used to be in the spotlight regardless
@aquila42282 жыл бұрын
Just one small thing about Brazil. The monarchy didn’t fell because of the death of the emperor, him and his family were deposed and exiled after the abolition of slavery(something they strongly gave their support to help happen). Pedro II died two years later in 1891, in Paris, where he had a head of state’s funeral
@DarthFhenix55 Жыл бұрын
Just to clarify, they support both the abolition and the abdication.
@carlosmpsenyorcapitacollon6977 Жыл бұрын
@@DarthFhenix55 ?
@qe9573 Жыл бұрын
Yall brazilians always gotta bring up brazil in any video about portugal its incredible
@lucasithegreat2711 Жыл бұрын
The abolition of slavery was more of a secundary reason for the fall of the monarchy. It was the military class and the urban sectors of the society that came together in opposition of the monarchical regime. The military because they felt that the political class of the Empire was repressing the army, and the urban sectors because they felt the country was lagging behind due to corruption and economic stagnation. So they rallied under the republican movement that was gaining ground since 1870 and by the very end of the 1880's they deposed the monarchy in rushed coup d'état that ended working perfectly, and so the Republic was officially proclaimed in the City Hall of Rio de Janeiro in the evening of 15th of November 1889. The wealthy rural oligarchy who was more affected by the abolition of slavery and was discontent with the monarchy only joined against the regime at the very end and didn't have major effect in the outcome of the ousting of the monarchy. They will however, have an important role in the country's government in the first years of the Republic tho.
@dinamosflams Жыл бұрын
@@qe9573 it's a minor correction since this myatake is very easy to make
@DarkSoulSama Жыл бұрын
I'd like to note that despite 1974's Portugal being very rich "as a country", most of that money was being spent on the Colonial War, or otherwise not being invested in ways that improved the lives of the general population.
@brunods45602 ай бұрын
Portugal wasn't rich by any measure. It was a very backwards country in just about everything, "owned " by a dozen families, and with bo real distribution of wealth
@SemoreButtsFucker2 ай бұрын
Like the USA today
@NewEnglandInSeattle18 күн бұрын
I believe you are correct. I was born in the Azores shortly before the Carnation Revolution and we were dirt poor farm peasants. We didn't even have indoor plumbing. Wherever that money when, it wasn't spent on us.
@SemoreButtsFucker18 күн бұрын
@ ✅
@brunods456018 күн бұрын
@NewEnglandInSeattle there is a huge difference between the GDP(PIB in portuguese) and how that wealth is distributed. During the Estado Novo dictatorship, around 12 families , almost literally, owned portugal from an economic perspective. Plus the good performance of Portugal economically, on par with most of Europe, should be not seen a big feat. Economic stability in europe post war allowed that, and not the mythical, extraordinary skills of Salazar as an economist.
@Amity-Phil Жыл бұрын
Salazar was totally dedicated to the Portuguese State. There was no foreign debt, a triple-A credit rating and virtually no inflation during his long rule. He tactfully held out against many of the bully threats from the US, never folding, even managing to hold onto a large gold reserve from exports to NS Germany during WW2. Portugal’s last true great leader RIP
@thegoodfriend62472 ай бұрын
At some point, is is said that someone might have tried to "buy" Angola for 1 Bn Dollars and Salazar swiftly responded, "Portugal is not for sale". Though I am not a fan of the man I can see him answering that. When I see our leadership for the last 20 years I feel ashamed.
@srkgp7754 Жыл бұрын
It's sad how Portugal has such a beautiful history yet it's always forgotten
@lxportugal9343 Жыл бұрын
Let's keep it that way we like to stay under the radar 😄
@manuelcardoso3205 Жыл бұрын
Slava Ukraini, march to moscow
@lusitaniagov Жыл бұрын
@@manuelcardoso3205 nope from🇵🇹
@retivens925 Жыл бұрын
Much alike russians, we do not like foreigners to interfere in our affaires.
@Anonymous-py1sf Жыл бұрын
The portuguese don't care, lmao, they are tired of both immigrants and tourists 😂😂
@nelsonchereta816 Жыл бұрын
Portuguese-American, my parents immigrated to the US in 1969. They were both devout Catholics and thought Salazar a good man and a good president. He's not forgotten in Portugal and so far as I can tell from the older generation of my family he is remembered fondly. Certainly better than Franco.
@cristinadasilva84709 ай бұрын
I wonder then why your family left Portugal, because the great emigration during that time was because people were poor and suffering under this fascist rule. He is NOT remembered fondly here, and there was a revolution for a reason. April 25th is still celebrated to this day so that people do not forget the horrors of fascism. Never again. I promise, he is not remembered fondly here, except by far right fascist groups.
@miguelribeiro75029 ай бұрын
@@cristinadasilva8470well, back in 2007 there was a tv program to choose the greatest portuguese ever. I can say Salazar won with more than 40% of votes. And he wasn’t originally in the list of people you could vote for, but after some polemic they were forced to ad him. So, yeah, whether you like it or not, a lot of people still see him fondly.
@Argonhubert9 ай бұрын
@@cristinadasilva8470was he really fascist though? It doesn’t seem he was under fascist ideology (like Giovanni Gentle or Mussolini philosophy)
@Argonhubert9 ай бұрын
@@cristinadasilva8470seems like a regular dictator.
@mrnoide80278 ай бұрын
@@cristinadasilva8470 Mentira. Tens de aprender história minha querida. No início Salazar do governo de Salazar, ele aumentou drasticamente a economia e melhorou imenso a vidas dos portugueses. Salazar aumentou as reservas de ouro em Portugal e quando ele foi colocado no poder a vida das pessoas melhorou imenso. No entanto, a guerra colonial arruinou tudo. Salazar despejou montes de dinheiro na guerra colonial para não perder as colónias. Ele fez isso porque se perdêssemos as colónias, tudo o que o regime dele defendia ia por cano abaixo. Já deves ter visto aquele cartaz antigo da época de Salazar que dizia "Portugal não é um país pequeno", e tinha um mapa com as nossas colónias a mostrar o quão grandes as mesmas eram. Se Portugal perdesse essas colónias, Portugal ia tornar-se um país pequeno e insignificante, e muito provavelmente iria acontecer o que aconteceu com a monarquia, o regime de Salazar seria destruído. Tu apenas aprendeste que o governo de Salazar foi mau porque é o que o governo diz, o que as escolas ensinam. Os desgraçados dos políticos do nosso país querem apenas ganhar dinheiro, não querem tornar Portugal num país melhor, não querem ser como Salazar, um dos poucos líderes republicanos portugueses que desejava o melhor para Portugal.
@brunorezendecrescencio9743 Жыл бұрын
2:38 Actually, in Brazil, Pedro was first deposed in 1889 by a military coup and then died in exhile in France in 1891; just a little correction
@familygash7500 Жыл бұрын
*THE PORTUGUESE PEOPLE IN 1910:* How dare you give up our colonies! REVOLUTION! *THE PORTUGUESE PEOPLE IN 1974:* Stop holding onto our colonies! REVOLUTION!
@soweco2969 Жыл бұрын
I didn't even notice that 💀
@lxportugal9343 Жыл бұрын
Colonies were a waste of money Our job was done, it was time to let go.
@DarthFhenix55 Жыл бұрын
@@lxportugal9343 Also capitalism changed the way of trading goods, you didn't need to have colonist to get uncommon prime matters or even made products anymore.
@lxportugal9343 Жыл бұрын
@@DarthFhenix55 They became Christians There was no need to colonize anymore
@DarthFhenix55 Жыл бұрын
@@lxportugal9343 I didn't say otherwise, but making christians wasn't the main point of making colonies. It was trade.
@lourencopedro1 Жыл бұрын
I am portuguese and actually from Santa Comba Dão - Salazar's birthplace - and I can asure you here nobody forgot about him.
@itneverbegan738 Жыл бұрын
estes estrangeiros não percebem nada, pensam que sabem tudo sobre o nosso país. Salazer "esquecido"??? LOL essa é boa. eles nunca viram o twitter tuga, esquerdalhos e direitolas a falar no homem todo o santo dia e todos os dias. ambos completamente obcecados pelo Salazarismo. é doentio.
@lucydelgado969 Жыл бұрын
i dont think any portuguese has forgoten about him
@JoaoMariaNunes Жыл бұрын
even the bridge keeps unofficially his name...lol
@Luso-Belenense Жыл бұрын
Eai? O que o pessoal acha dele? Gosta ou odeia?
@JoaoMariaNunes Жыл бұрын
@@Luso-Belenense depende, os que foram perseguidos pela PIDE e enviados para o Tarrafal, não morrem de amores por ele, mas ninguem duvida que ele salvou Portugal da Banca rota causada pelos republicanos, ha quem goste e quem deteste...
@FrancescusLover10 ай бұрын
I met a relative of Salazar, i speaked with him about how Salazar was with his close circle: Very loved especially from the youngs, and he loved nature(REALLY, he apparently loved it so much that he spend hours walking in the forest just looking at it) and yeah he was a cool guy to be around :)
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
Sounds delightful.wonder why half the people hated him
@FrancescusLover6 ай бұрын
@@ivanbarbosa81 Communists hated him, but i won't call them people. The average men, like my father or grandfather were big supporter of him. even decades after the end of the Estado Novo.
@Fabiani930 Жыл бұрын
Salazar didnt want to take the Marshall Plan´s loans and was "made" to accept them. plus I´ve heard that Portugal was the only country that repaid those loans in full
@jackprescott9652 Жыл бұрын
Nobody repaids all the fortune USA expends in support all over the world. US citizens always paids the bills.
@MrKlipstar11 ай бұрын
He made the FNMAL Plant In 1954 in Savavém, with Money and basiclly,he recovered the Money back in few years,making ammo to Portugal 🇵🇹 and exported to Spain and Germany,too.
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
That's the reason we are so rich and developed.Visionary they say
@Fabiani9306 ай бұрын
@@ivanbarbosa81 yeah shitty argument. If you knew anything about your country's history you would know he was asked to be the finance minister (to get Portugal out of bankrupcy) and then was appointed Prime Minister on the political capital he gained from doing a good job. With that shitty optic of yours you could also blame every single King since the age of Discoveries lol. We should have been "so rich and developed" since those days.
@dudamonas2450 Жыл бұрын
9:00 Portugal was NOT a wealthy country by 1974, at the time we were (and still are) the poorest in western europe, so that part wasn’t good
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
Economia crescia cima dos 6% e Portugal passou de estar a 39% da media de riqueza da europa para estar a 59%. As mehorias eram expressivas. O país tinha consolidação orçamental, economia crescia, divida representava 12% do PIB moeda era a 6º mais forte do mundo e as reservas em divisa nacional, moeda estrangeira e oura eram enormes.
@lukegriffin2042 Жыл бұрын
@@br3menPT ya safoda a guerra na África e os milhares de putos que foram para lá lutar em vão, safoda os milhares de trabalhadores agrícolas que vivem na miséria, safoda as centenas de prisioneiros políticos e acima de tudo a cultura de medo e repressão. Pelo menos a economia estava a crescer 💪💪
@marusdod3685 Жыл бұрын
@@lukegriffin2042 houve maior número de prisioneiros políticos depois do 25 de abril do que antes
@diogorodrigues747 Жыл бұрын
@@marusdod3685 A sério?! Quem é que é preso político neste preciso momento? Explicita.
@diogorodrigues747 Жыл бұрын
@@br3menPT *Economia crescia cima dos 6% e Portugal passou de estar a 39% da media de riqueza da europa para estar a 59%.* Hoje em dia Portugal está a 76% da média europeia e já chegou a estar nos 85% em 2001. Portanto o problema não é o regime mas sim a quase total persistência de governos incompetentes nos últimos 20-25 anos. É preciso também ter em conta que estamos a fazer referência a dados macroeconómicos que não eram verdadeiramente sentidos pelo povo pois grande parte do crescimento ou era gasto nos esforços da Guerra Colonial ou era perdido para as elites corruptas do regime e oligopólios. Caetano tentou mudar isso com uma espécie de "capitalismo à chinesa", mas já era tarde demais... *divida representava 12% do PIB moeda era a 6º mais forte do mundo* Normal que a dívida apenas representasse 12% do PIB quando não era feito quase nenhum investimento, tirando aquele para efeitos de propaganda. Já a moeda ser forte não é verdadeiramente um argumento pois o escudo tinha um valor claramente manipulado. Assim que as ferramentas de manipulação desapareceram em 1974 o escudo colapsou e seguiram-se anos de inflação superior a 25% que só acabariam com as reformas de Cavaco Silva na década de 1980.
@martimhenriques1169 Жыл бұрын
You forgot to mention that, although Portugal maintained it's "neutrality" during world war two, Portugal was selling tungsten to Germany for the production of ammo, and allowed Portuguese volunteers to enrole into the Spanish Blue Division, fighting for the German Army. In the other hand, Salazar gave permission to the British to build an air base in the Azores Islands, which was then granted to the Americans.
@nelsonchereta816 Жыл бұрын
Well, when you're a small militarily weak country in the middle of WW2 (Sweden, Switzerland, Spain) If you want to not get invaded you need to keep both sides happy. Or at the very least not make either one too upset with you. The Germans had a plan to take over Portugal, Operation Isabella. And the US and British considered occupying the Azores the way they did Iceland.
@camloff Жыл бұрын
Salazar is a poor businessman with the powerful ones: Germany, Spain, British, and USA.
@wallybonejengles559511 ай бұрын
He also allowed over a million people to flee the Reich Occupied Europe through Lisbon. Right under the noses of Allied AND Axis intelligence. He did as much as he could for the greater good while walking on a tightrope and not showing his hand. He was a simple man. Thats what I think makes him such an interesting figure in Portuguese History. He was the last person you would ever assume would rise to leadership. He just fell into it. He didn't want glory. He didn't want power. But when he fell into it he was afraid to lose it before Portugal was ready. The Cold War era and colonial wars really put an asterisk next to his name. But I will always appreciate the part Dr. Salazar played for humanity. He wasn't a hero. He wasn't a villain either. He was a just a man. A man who loved his people, his nation, and his God.
@luizfilipecouto1030 Жыл бұрын
2:38 Dom Pedro II was deposed and died in Paris, the empire did not fell because of his death
@emperorpaws8447 Жыл бұрын
I'm portuguese and i've heard stories of my parents growing up during salazar's regime, they remember mostly the stuff from the late 60's and early 70's when they were teens and kids the stuff salazar did to people was presecution of communists and communist sympathizers, we had a special police force similar to germany's gestapo called PIDE, this was the republican police, they'd interrogate and torture people with no sleep torture to many ppl they deemed an enemy of the state. My parents were kids and neither did their parents ever had to go through this, but older ppl they know did.
@Fives-wk4dl Жыл бұрын
Sounds based
@xXEatYourDogXx10 ай бұрын
My great grandfather fought against Salazar's regime as a rebel. He was later imprisoned and somehow managed to get out of prison.
@JoRdi-ul4xg7 ай бұрын
@@Fives-wk4dl unbased*
@JdC.S.R.S.d.E7 ай бұрын
We need Salazar 2.0 in Portugal.Put everyone to work. Quem nao trabalha nao come.
@JoRdi-ul4xg7 ай бұрын
@@JdC.S.R.S.d.E waa waa
@yugo16902 жыл бұрын
Of all the cold war regimes in Europe I read about the Estado Novo the most. It’s the most interesting for me
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
Same actually. Still waiting for Green Tea with D Man to release the Colonial War videos.
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
maybe its because Salazar had a much higher intellectual preparation than Franco or Mussolini or Hitler...
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
Very interesting, similar to Franco.Nothing better if you're into spying and torture
@theplutonimus2 жыл бұрын
I thought it was about Salazar Edit : It was
@theplutonimus2 жыл бұрын
I am very interested in Forgotten Authoritarians
@FBWe Жыл бұрын
So in sum, if some country were to have a dictator, Salazar would be the best choice. It's rare to see a dictator who actually cared for his country and that actually did some good
@williamwatitwa3534 Жыл бұрын
Not hard Gaddafi did much more
@雷-t3j Жыл бұрын
south korea actually had an economic miracle, I'd rather live there
@Icneumone7 Жыл бұрын
Salazar was never a dictator. His party was dictatorial. Salazar was a statesperson, one of the best in the world ever. He was forced to cooperate under risk of death. This is a man who lived with his mother until late in his life, he publicly admitted to eat bean soup every day a fact that funnily got proved. He was a very humble and intelligent man that sadly had no choice but to cooperate with the authoritarian party. He came on the cover of time magazine as one of the greatest statespersons ever. Not an easy feat. He alone decides the outcome of the second world war by declaring neutrality and not forcing Franco to join the axis powers. Had Portugal been in the war, Franco would have joined the axis powers early on and the story would have been much different. But he still did show support to the allied forces, as Portuguese people starved to provide grain and hemp and wood and many other resources for the allied military, mainly Britain and France.
@Icneumone7 Жыл бұрын
@@雷-t3jThat miracle is called American capitalism. See how Americanised their society become. And they hate it.
@FBWe Жыл бұрын
@@Icneumone7 I'm aware of all that but Salazar was still a dictator. Being the head of a dictatorial party makes him a dictator wether he wants ot or not.
@alejandrop.s.3942 Жыл бұрын
Miguel Primo de Rivera is also really overlooked, and the historical background for his arrival to the dictatorship has more in common with Salazar and Mussolini's than Franco's in many regards.
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
Omg
@AutismusMaximus14 ай бұрын
Portugal and Spain not joining Germany can be considered the reason for catastrophic times we are living. If Europeans don't unite and rise, humanity might be facing total extinction and I'm not exaggerating.
@crusader21122 жыл бұрын
To anyone interested, look up Catholic Corporatism and “Distributism”. (Not in the Socialist way) VIVA LA CHRISTO REI!!! 🙏🏻 Can you do a video on Franco?
@JoshSullivanHistory2 жыл бұрын
I could, but as of right now I'm trying to think of a video that I could make that isn't just another biography.
@crusader21122 жыл бұрын
@@JoshSullivanHistory Okay thanks. Peace ✌🏻
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
I think sadly Salazar's regime is a bad example of either. He failed to even churn out much of a theory on Corporatism.
@crusader21122 жыл бұрын
@@johnnotrealname8168 Perhaps. I don’t know too much about Salazar’s Portugal.
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
@@crusader2112 It mostly favoured employers and he did not manage to break up Southern Land-Owners who helped him into power. Salazar honestly just had a hard time keeping the country together.
@IronMar1O Жыл бұрын
I mean, Salazar was even with Franco in terms of years in rule. Like if we say that Salazar rose to power in 1932 until 1968, that would be 36 years. Meanwhile in Spain, Franco managed to win the war in the year 1939 and rule until his death at 1975, and that would also be 36 years. Pd: if you are thinking “but Salazar’s regime still lasted before Salazar’s death at 1970” Then we should also be able to count the years of leadership of Franco during the civil war an so would be more or less equal again.
@FranzBorg10 ай бұрын
Well, Salazar was in power before 1932. It was from 1928-1968, 40 years, and the regime lasted another 6 years.
@sergiomiranda149710 ай бұрын
This documentary is actually pretty accurate 👍
@spider-menace197811 ай бұрын
You didn’t talk about PIDE
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
This "forgotten dictator" was recently voted by the Portuguese as the greatest Portuguese of all time.
@CarlosCostaX Жыл бұрын
😂
@friedrichbaeker Жыл бұрын
forgotten outside of portugal he said...
@joaotomas9430 Жыл бұрын
Funny that they held that poll again years later and who won was Mário Soares, founder of the socialist party and the number one enemy of Mr.Salazar
@ExtremegamerMonster Жыл бұрын
what? which portuguese voted for that? our ultra right wing party? because everyone else hates him.
@oscarosullivan4513 Жыл бұрын
The Portuguese version of Éamon De Valera bar the non authoritarianism
@satyakisil9711 Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure 1.4 billion people from a certain country has not forgotten him at all.
@migueldiogo8395 Жыл бұрын
Why?
@satyakisil9711 Жыл бұрын
@@migueldiogo8395 because vindaloo.
@migueldiogo8395 Жыл бұрын
@@satyakisil9711 ahhh ahahhaha Yes in my opinion we have the best cuisine in the world, simply because we can cook everything our own way and make it good
@franciscopereira2993 Жыл бұрын
@@satyakisil9711 Ohh I was expecting it to be bcs of resistance to give up colonies of índia but i´m glad to be bcs of that dish you guys apparently enjoy. Much love to india!
@MrKlipstar11 ай бұрын
Who can' t forget out Hindustani Friends In Goa,Daman,Diu and Dadar Haveli from the former Portuguese State of Índia ?🇵🇹💔
@eisbergsyndrom5010 Жыл бұрын
Salazar feared his regime would collapse if he deolonized but it ended up getting overthrown partly because of the endless resources spent stubornly holding on to the colonies.
@ac0pt Жыл бұрын
Funny how Salazar is now Viewed by many leaders as a source of learning, he will be recognised in history as a good dictator, but still as a dictator. Sad to see how many Portuguese still disdain is achievements.
@lisboah7 ай бұрын
Did you really expect that a regime would praise the previous one? Not saying that the dictatorship was good, but how would it make sense for the democratic government to praise a dictator?
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
He was gods sent angel.. fallen angel
@RANDOMSHITRANDOM Жыл бұрын
We haven't forgot about him. What he did impacted Portugal with such strenght.
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
A strength that caused 5 million refugees fleeing from the colonies because he wouldn't admit independence
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
Nowadays, Portugal is known essentially for being the country of Cristiano Ronaldo and of José Mourinho.
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
This has some historical problems, Salazar was not as Pro-Church as you put it although generally correct (His marriage policy did work.). Manuel II was good including trying for an alliance with socialists but that went bad. The First Republic was horrible. Salazar managed to create a Civilian led government in a military dictatorship (Seriously, the military had to overthrown the government in the end.) which shows how adroit a politician he was. His Colonial policy was the issue, he did exploit the people horribly when he could have liberated them before any Wars (That is his failure.).
@jackyex Жыл бұрын
Honestly if Salazar had just gave independence to Guinea he would probably manage to keep the rest of the colonies all the way to the end of the cold war, Amílcar Cabral and the PAIG were extremely good at fighting, controlling most of Guinea with ease, Guinea was small and had not much value but their leaders knew how to lead and turned Guinea into a Portuguese Army Meat Grinder Spinola wrote "Portugal e o Futuro" based on his fighting in Guinea, Amílcar Cabral put the Portuguese Army to shame there.
@johnnotrealname8168 Жыл бұрын
@@jackyex True, then he was kicked out after the War and fled to Portugal. It then devolved into Civil War (After they massacred a couple African collaborators.). Very nice.
@greenbrown7776 Жыл бұрын
Rather warm and fuzzy assessment of a dictator.
@yvonetubla7682 Жыл бұрын
because he was a good guy
@cosmicmatt18 ай бұрын
It’s difficult to justify considering Salazar as a “good guy” given his repression of women’s rights, suppression of freedom of speech, utilization of a secret police for torture and murder of dissenters, and the exploitative and racist policies toward colonies to bolster his own regime.
@thegoodfriend62472 ай бұрын
@@yvonetubla7682 There is a famous speech of him that I consider a master piece of cynicism. It goes something along this lines: "To the tortured souls of doubt and the negativism of the age (actually he said "century", but that is within the spirit, for century means both age and materialism, as secular matters) we seek to restore the comfort of grand assurances: We Do not discuss God and virtue; We do not discuss the Fatherland and it's History; We do not Discuss authority and it's prestige; We do not discuss Family and it's morals; We do not discuss the glory of work and it's duty" To that end Salazar created two political police corps, one called PVDE, and its successor PIDE, two para-military organizations "Legião Portuguesa" and "Mocidade Portuguesa" (as Youth organizations), he abolished political parties and labor unions and forbade strike, created state-run unions under the umbrella of Federation called FNAT, he instituted censorship and political sackings at universities and civil service, he promoted the creation of a Propaganda Department and Cinema was instrumentalized to rally the nation. You might not consider Salazar's ideas to be pure fascism. You're right, they weren't. But as far as methods go, Salazar was completely fascist. And even the Roman right-arm gesture was common in the 1930's. Not by any chance he held a signed picture of Mussolini on his desk. kzbin.info/www/bejne/m6aQpKmbl62YnM0
@pedrocsantos8 Жыл бұрын
From 1950 until Salazar's death in 1970, Portugal saw its GDP per capita increase at an annual average rate of 5.7 per cent. The economic growth and levels of capital formation from 1960 to 1973 were characterized by an unparalleled robust annual growth rates of GDP (6.9 per cent), industrial production (9 per cent), private consumption (6.5 per cent) and gross fixed capital formation (7.8 per cent).[6] In 1960, at the initiation of Salazar's more outward-looking economic policy, Portugal's per capita GDP was only 38 percent of the European Community (EC-12) average; by the end of the Salazar period, in 1968, it had risen to 48 percent; and in 1973, under the leadership of Marcelo Caetano, Portugal's per capita GDP had reached 56.4 percent of the EC-12 average.[7] On a long term analysis, after a long period of economic divergence before 1914, and a period of chaos during the First Republic, the Portuguese economy recovered slightly until 1950, entering thereafter on a path of strong economic convergence with the wealthiest economies of Western Europe, until the Carnation Revolution in April 1974
@MrKlipstar11 ай бұрын
A Industrialização Portuguesa de 1948, com as barragens, até á Físip em 1975.Só lá vamos com a Indústria, Agricultura,Pescas e Minas ao máximo possível Eu defendo um novo modelo industrial, para Portugal.
@SirBenjiful3 ай бұрын
Salazar was removed from power after his stroke in 1968, so his tenure should only be measured until then, not up to his death in 1970.
@josejoseph493 Жыл бұрын
Salazar is not , at all, forgotten In Portugal, the mass media still blames him for everything. If it rains or it doesn't, it's always Salazar's fault For me, Salazar is greatest Portuguese of all time . God rest his soul
@medicbn9443 Жыл бұрын
for me too dude for me too sure he did good things and bad things but we gave us stability when we need it most
@miguelpadeiro762 Жыл бұрын
@@medicbn9443 Alongside sending a generation to the meatgrinder and creating a Portugal split in two worlds The "mass media blames even rain on Salazar" is a massive victimization here, never have I ever this lol, at most we still glorify his image as the calm mediator and guardian of Portugal. He sure kept his enemies very safe as their guardian in Tarrafal
@di4mgaming115 Жыл бұрын
nao valeu a pena. pq impedir a liberdade de expressao? algo inutil que ele fez. para mim ele é mais um escumalha autoritario. ele so gastou o dinheiro em infra-estrutura e a população continuou pobre. nada melhorou
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
The mass media are the mess media.
@HolyknightVader999 Жыл бұрын
@@miguelpadeiro762 Considering what happened to Portugal's former colonies, I can understand why he fought. India is now a pagan hellhole with Modi persecuting Muslims and Christians. African nations right now are unstable as all hell.
@trevormillar1576 Жыл бұрын
Nah, people still remember Salazar; Europe's really forgotten dictator is Ioannis (John) Metaxas of Greece, the only fascist to side with the allies against Hitler and Mussolini. Needless to say he didn't last long.
@Macvallesantos1 Жыл бұрын
A dictator that at the time of his death had one old car and a family house. Didn´t still a dime from Portugal, left a debt free country even after so many independence wars. And left more than 500 hundred tons of gold in the national bank. Then the socialites came to power and after only 50 years, we owe more than 150% PIB and our economy is on of the poorest in EU. And the gold reserves dropped more than 50%. Most people didn´t have any problem with the "dictatorship", only the communist reactionaries.
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
Still Portugal was poor, he should've used that gold don't u think?
@xXpl0ziVx Жыл бұрын
You forgot to mention the political priosioners, the famine that ravage the poorer regions of portugal (like alentejo), the thousands that were drafted and sent to die in the colonies, the political police which killed and tortured anyone who opposed the regime, the censorship installed in Portugal during that time. The revolution in 1974 was supported by the people and the military in such a way that only 1 dead was reported during the whole day of revolution (25 of april 1974).
@amazingvidguyz2 жыл бұрын
This painted a rosy picture about the dictator and should be taken with a pinch of salt. I have discussed this with the people who lived during the time, my basic understanding is that normal people outside of the ruling class were poor and hungry. This was the experience of the masses, not the minority. Santa Comba Dao is in my locality
@johnnotrealname81682 жыл бұрын
This is true however Portugal had always been poor, he was trying slowly, and so stably, to let it go up. The Portuguese economy was growing under him (It had an outdated railway and poor industry.), Salazar was known for frugality which is still born out. He largely was secluded after an assassination attempt but did return after meeting a lady (Nothing happened though.).
@dogex2673 Жыл бұрын
yeah lmao, not even potuguese but i can notice this vid was biased af
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
@@dogex2673 of course....if its no to talk shit about him its biased for sure.....lol
@12_yeslol12_ Жыл бұрын
@@johnnotrealname8168 his rule was a disaster, his isolationist policies kept us from developing and set us back decades compared to the rest of europe. We still suffer the consequences today.
@johnnotrealname8168 Жыл бұрын
@@12_yeslol12_ His isolationist policies ended in the 1960s by which time Portugal had not taken a foreign loan for decades. It was stagnant but subsequently the economy rapidly grew with levels comparable to Asian nations. It was definitely backwards however that is not really his fault given where Portugal started under his rule.
@nunopereira265 Жыл бұрын
One thing it was not just war in Angola but yes in every colony we had beung Mozambique Cape Verde St. Tomé and Princr, Guine and others, it was a long decade of war that lead the exausthion to extreme
@hotman_pt_ Жыл бұрын
not really, there was no war in Cabo Verde, São Tomé and Príncipe, Timor, Macau or portuguese India. We just gave the first three cause some dumb people wanted to.
@joaodemenezes7862 жыл бұрын
The finest governance was that of the Estado Novo of Dr. Oliveira Salazar, as I had witnessed in Goa. Bribery and corruption were unheard of. Today Goa, once Rome of the East, is a political, moral, and financial wreck.
@MonsieurDean2 жыл бұрын
0:26 Germany: "Allow us to introduce ourselves..."
@crusader21122 жыл бұрын
“Gutentag” 👋🏻
@PeakPeakPeakPeakPeak2 жыл бұрын
@@crusader2112 Poland: Guten tag my ass
@crusader21122 жыл бұрын
@@PeakPeakPeakPeakPeak It’s a joke Poland, don’t worry,
@DarthFhenix55 Жыл бұрын
@@crusader2112 Russia: How about another joke, Germany?
@crusader2112 Жыл бұрын
@@DarthFhenix55 Mein Gott. Russia no please. Nein!!!!!!
@vanessasanha528 Жыл бұрын
He’s never been forgotten we remember him every 25th April lmao
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
For the worse reasons
@SerialChronicles2 жыл бұрын
Great info, I did not even know this about Portugal.
@12D_D21 Жыл бұрын
It is not at all great info. This video is filled with misinformation, and, if you're really interested, I'd advise you to research yourself a bit on the topic.
@SerialChronicles Жыл бұрын
@@12D_D21 Will do can you send me some links please thank you.
@fatkrab7556 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Time magazine issued a number calling salazar "the dean of dictators" due to his habilities. In a unrelated note, salazar used his wits to supply tungsten to both Great Britain and Nazi Germany. So much so, the debt of the british couldnt be repayed in money, causing them to have to deliver all the gold in their vaults as payment. And despite the awful leaders we've had for the past 49 years, many of which have spent a lot of the gold on bland expenses "for the development of the land" some of it still remains. And as a leader, he gave all he earned to the government he served, having no family, no love life, and dying a poor man, with all of its earnings to be given back to the state Now, as a portuguese myself, i must admit. If i had to choose between big baby costa, Ventura the shitbag and salazar, the 3rd option would be the clear one. Our current leader has been continuing the stupidity of stalling the construction for the montijo airport, although the beja airport is a great reposition, making it possible to substitute the current faro and lisbon airports as excecutive airports, constructing a new, spacious and modern deck while building railroads to connect said airport with the cities. The only reason big baby Costa is still on leadership, is that: 1- He always makes bland promisses when his period is about to end, trying to capture the love of people by giving out small gifts 2- He is the representant of the biggest party in the country 3- The other choices are even worse, or sadly, irrelevant, due to the high focus on PS(Socialist party, Current leader), PSD(Social-Democratic Party, 2nd place(used to be until new polls came out)), and, sadly, CHEGA(Full on right wing, controlled by the biggest asswipe to roam this land, basically a donald trump but worse as he has been really racist towards several races in public) So, in conclusion, please kill me, i was born in the wrong country
@Chaika1974 Жыл бұрын
What a beautiful comment. The last part about "kill me, i was born in the wrong country" really hit me hard. Portugal has so much potential, but it's wasted in such a criminal way that i'd rather have been born somewhere else.
@fatkrab7556 Жыл бұрын
@@Chaika1974 True, yes. Sadly, the country goes from bad to worse. After this comment was made, it became public knowledge that out finance minister has denominated his wife as a very important minister(forgot which), and did not told the public because "It wasnt necessary" While this is happening, big baby costa is enjoying a nice vacation/diplomatic trip to south korea
@fatkrab7556 Жыл бұрын
@@Chaika1974 Fds acabei de me aperceber que tu também és PT. Meu mal
@slendii366 Жыл бұрын
As someone who will be moving to Portugal, the main thing that saddens me is that people even agree with CHEGA. Even Salazar, a dictator, didn’t say the outright racist, and dangerous stuff that the CHEGA leader has said. His supporters are proud of Ventura’s Nazi salutes in public and false narratives backed by misinterpreted statistics.
@longiusaescius2537 Жыл бұрын
@fatkrab7556 criticize chega for having or not having sound economy? No, it's cause they're mean to Africans !! 🤡🤡
@Local_NPC403 Жыл бұрын
As a Portuguese, yes its very sad we are mostly forgotten, mostly everything people know about us is CR7. But anyway its very funny hearing english people try to pronounce our names xd. Thanks for knowing we exist! :D
@DiogoGaming2 Жыл бұрын
é isso irmão, feliz 25 de abril, fascismo nunca mais, salazar bom é salazar na cova
@charlie27203 Жыл бұрын
É verdade, isso me fez rir 🤣
@Portugalisbased Жыл бұрын
in general portugal, as a portuguese, is very forgotten. even though i'd say we have more history than spain
@Anonymous-py1sf Жыл бұрын
Man, there are cities in Portugal full of tourists, just like Greece, do you want Portugal to be even more famous? Bullshit. You should try to make it less famous. Visit Lisbon. Immigrants and tourists everywhere, sadly.
@iankingsleys2818 Жыл бұрын
Unusually for a dictator and indeed for most other European Political leaders, Salazar was an honest man and drew very little in salary, The average Spartan would have turned his nose up as his accommodation..
@joaoarturdasilvapiteira9239 Жыл бұрын
A good man who died poor, unlike the vast majority of politicians
@Duck-wc9de Жыл бұрын
I, in primary school, actually studied in the same school Salazar completed primary education.
@rafaalves129010 ай бұрын
One of the greatest portuguese guy ever 🤩. VIVA SALAZAR🇵🇹
@kajamix Жыл бұрын
It was a time when dictators believed they had to be real mean and those who were anti-dictatorship were by and large under the influence of communism and maoism. Both were bizarre.
@nhomoraes Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a eulogy to Salazar. Actually, Portugal was known under his regime for being poor and illiterate, contrary to the video claim (check the figures, please!!). Another mistake: though the collapse of the Brazilian monarchy contributed to the end of the Portuguese kingdom, the Empire of Brazil fell down in 1889, but the emperor would die in exile only two years later.
@albertorosales5555 Жыл бұрын
A correction Dr Salazar did not come to Coimbra to study finance but to study law
@albertorosales5555 Жыл бұрын
@count kalergi a cadeira de Finanças Públicas , em Coimbra é leccionada desde um ponto de vista jurídico , dando bastante ênfase , ao que hoje em dia chamamos lei de enquadramento orçamental ( Leo ) . Durante o Estado Novo o método/doutrina de equilíbrio orçamental vigente diferia bastante ao que a Leo atual prevê .
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
One escudo bought two pesetas. Twenty five escudos bought one US dollar. The country was as pristine as Finland. It was a paradise for sport hunting and fishing. The region of Cascais, Estoril, and Sintra, was comparable to the Côte d'Azur. Lisbon was one of the civilised continent's leading cultural capitals. And then democracy happened. As for rights, democracy did away with the right to own firearms. In compensation, the Portuguese now have the right to be homos and to use drugs. They're also governed by a supra-state. So much for democracy! It even requires confiscatory taxation.
@CarlosCostaX Жыл бұрын
But you had censorship (by the way, how can you have a leading capital culture wise if most of the literature, cinema, music and so on was banned?) political police, torture, concentration camps, no freedom of speech, no freedom of assembly... But yeah, fishing was great 😂
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
@@CarlosCostaX Compare the main opera company, São Carlos, as it operates nowadays with that of the Estado Novo era. As for censorship, why is it that Salazar's censorship was wrong, but that of the bien-pensants is kosher? Try using words that the bien-pensants don't like, or criticising protected groups, or simply stating inconvenient facts, online, or in Britain, or in France, or in Germany. But, then again, that's kosher censorship, isn't it? Aren't the FBI, the NSA, the CIA, Scotland Yard, and the RCMP, political polices? In America, even the IRS is political, not to mention the prosecutors, the judges, the schools, the universities, and the businesses. In America and in Britain, one could become unemployed for being politically incorrect. Don't the EU and the UN advocate censorship? Singing Cara al Sol in Madrid nowadays incurs a €350 K fine. As for torture, isn't that what the Americans deem enhanced interrogation? As for concentration camps, the Americans deem them internment camps. This is what the smart cities are all about. Freedom of assembly in Canada incurs confiscated bank accounts, confiscated automobiles, and even confiscated dogs. In France, it results in bludgeoning with truncheons and in gassing. If the EU and the UN have their way, combustion engine automobiles will be banned. The roar of a Ferrari's V 12 engine will be available only on KZbin. Isn't progressivism wonderful?
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
@@CarlosCostaX Hunting and tauromachy are censored online. The garbage that misgoverns Portugal wants to abolish them.
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
@@CarlosCostaX Doesn't Portugal have a political police nowadays? It's function is to keep tabs on right-wingers. It coordinates its activities with other polices and with prosecutors. But, then again, its function is to intimidate and to persecute right-wingers. It's a kosher political police. The progressive Portugal invented hate crimes and hate speech. Somewhere, Salazar must be laughing.
@CarlosCostaX Жыл бұрын
@@hubertusvenator5838 as we used to say here, you are comparing shit with custard tarts. I don't have a clue what you are talking about man.
@Gagegehris2 жыл бұрын
Love the recognition of Herr Dollfuß🇦🇹✝️
@eaturcookiescookie7462 Жыл бұрын
🤨
@azores2 Жыл бұрын
He did many good things, he fixed the economy and kept us neutral in ww2 but even with all the money the state had he didn't give free healthcare or even tried to improve it, a good chunk of the population was illiterate and dragged Portugal into the colonial war that saw thousands of dead people and the economy ruined.
@miguelbat27 Жыл бұрын
and many of those resources were used to keep the country quiet and whoever challenged the state was taken prisioner and tortured.
@wilkic2 Жыл бұрын
False claims. The generations born after he took power quickly achieved literacy. He made far more progress in literacy than did the Republican government before him Also the economy was growing more than 4% YoY during his regime. It was never “ruined”
@kaveirinhaz Жыл бұрын
Good explanation. Nice to see a foreigner taking interest in Portuguese history.
@rogerhardy6306 Жыл бұрын
You might have added that Salazar was always personally frugal and never enriched himself whilst in power. He lived modestly and died poor. He was never corrupted by power. Many remember him fondly as a good well-intentioned man but others will point to the notorious secret police PIDE which brutally enforced the authoritarian rule. Unlike all other European dictators, he was not a military man and had no military background. He was an economist. He will always be remembered for keeping Portugal (and Spain) out of WW2 and the statue of Christ that looks over Lisbon was erected to celebrate this fact. I hope that his record will one day be re-examined favourably by future generations.
@okapa Жыл бұрын
Poor Salazar :'( Mate, please educate yourself. Entre nós, tugas, vai pro caralho. Lê, informa-te, pensa..por ti. Pensa...
@HolyknightVader999 Жыл бұрын
So he was a Spartan Catholic dictator. Cute.
@okapa Жыл бұрын
@@HolyknightVader999 yeah, there's Buda and then Salazar
@MrKlipstar Жыл бұрын
" We do not discuss God and his Santity,we do not discuss the Fatherland and his History and do not discuss the Autority and his prestige." Salazar,1936 in Braga Rally
@UnderRebelControl11 ай бұрын
How can you say this man was a Dictator if he wasn't. Just because his Country was doing amazing when he was in Office doesn't mean he was Evil just because no one else toke his place. The reality is people are unaware and uneducated about what is really going on.
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
The Marshall Plan was a loan scheme to buy influence. The borrowers were not expected to pay the loans. It paid for less than 5% of Europe's reconstruction. Portugal borrowed less than seventy million dollars under the Marshall Plan. It paid the short term loan on time. Portugal had immense natural resources in Angola. It had immense gold reserves. It was neither a poor, nor a small, country. Its working class and lower middle class were chronically poor. These classes were chronically poor everywhere. At this time, during the years between the wars and in the 1950s and most of the 1960s, the American South had families living in one-room cabins that earned a meagre subsistence as sharecroppers. Portugal's solid bourgeoisie, the professional classes, was on par with that of Switzerland. Its large fortunes were among the world's largest. Portugal's economy was essentially colonial. It was resource driven. Nowadays, Portugal is a cheap Club Med infested with foreigners. The Portuguese emigrate to Switzerland in droves. Ironically, the Lusitanians hailed originally from the territory that is now Switzerland.
@michaelsaint2267 Жыл бұрын
im portuguese... i agree 100% with your comment
@miguelbat27 Жыл бұрын
I get that this was supposed to be a quick explanation about it but I personally find the lack of mention about how much the Portuguese people suffered under his regime is a bit insulting, I think it would've given more impact too on the fact that it was later liberated by the people to end the Tyrany. It was quite recent considering my grandma lived through it and my mother was already around to experience the end of it so I think it deserves mention. But other than that great video! best wishes from Portugal :D
@PauloTheWinger11 Жыл бұрын
There was no "Liberation by the people". The Carnation Revolution was made by the army. It was organized by the army (Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho and a few more) and executed by the army (the name Salgueiro Maia should be familiar to you). Besides, most of the people in the major cities and in Alentejo were happy with the revolution the army made, yes, but not everybody felt that way. In 1975 the country was at the brink of a civil war. COPCON used PIDE-like repression and people in places like Rio Maior and throughout Northern Portugal began to attack the left-wing parties' headquarters. Also, Portuguese people from Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde and Mozambique were not happy with the revolution. Those who could run away from independence came to mainland Portugal or went to South Africa. Those who couldn't were either killed or had to join the non-Communist guerrillas (FNLA, RENAMO). The ones who came to mainland Portugal were labelled as "Fascists" for many years precisely because they were against the Carnation Revolution - and they too were part of "the people". Both white and black. Black, yes. This may surprise you, but the number of black Portuguese who fought in the ranks of the Portuguese army against the "Liberation" movements was very large and there were units composed exclusively of these people (African Commandos - mainly in Guinea -, Flechas - mainly in Angola -, GEP - mainly in Mozambique). And don't forget to add entire ethnical groups to the tally, such as the Bushmen (the original population of Angola) and the Bailundos. Another fact that should be food for thought: in 1973, in Mozambique, the number of Mozambique-born recruits was higher than the number of Mainland Portugal-born recruits. But there was censorship and the PIDE, yes. Portugal was not a Western-type democracy, no. But it was still less brutal towards the opposition than the Communist countries and, at a certain point, at the same level as the USA (see McCarthyism, or WW2 when Americans of Japanese descent were interned in concentration camps). But you wouldn't have problems with PIDE if you were against the Government UNLESS they suspected you were a Communist - that was the context of the Cold War. The approximate number of PIDE agents and informers is a mere 3,400. Some people say 20,000 but the only written list that was ever found shows about 3,400 names. And the combined population of Mainland Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Cape Verde and Guinea Bissau was about 25,000,000 people. Therefore, it's ridiculous to say that Portugal was a police state and that there was a PIDE member or informer in every corner. We're talking about 1 agent or informer per more than 7,000 people!!!!
@HeathenDance Жыл бұрын
@@PauloTheWinger11 A questão não era apenas "POLÍTICA." Foi social e cultural. O regime Salazarista, que durou meio século, tornou os Portugueses incrivelmente tacanhos, fracos, medrosos, ignorantes e incultos. Submissos à igreja Católica e agarrados às saias das mãezinhas. Infantis, malucos por futebol. Ainda hoje se nota isso. Qualquer dorzinha de nada, vão logo correr para as urgências dos hospitais, sempre metidos nos médicos. É uma coisa absolutamente deprimente. Vivi na Suécia e na Alemanha, e percebi que, em geral, os cidadãos Nórdicos de 20 e poucos anos são MUITO MAIS À FRENTE que Portugueses com idade para terem juízo. Eu tenho amigos com 40 anos e até mais a viverem em casa da mãezinha, e acham perfeitamente normal. Por certo que o Estado Novo é muito culpado de tudo isso e muito mais. Em 1974, literalmente, metade dos Portugueses eram analfabetos. Em plena Europa Ocidental, 30 anos depois do fim da II Guerra Mundial. Que mais há a dizer? As pessoas focam-se quase sempre, apenas, na história política ou até económica, e esquecem-se de avaliar as consequências, repito, CULTURAIS e SOCIAIS dos regimes. E em termos económicos, o Salazarismo era outro desastre. Pobreza por todo o lado, enfim.
@PauloTheWinger11 Жыл бұрын
@@HeathenDance a História de Portugal não começou com Salazar. Antes dele, após a miséria que foram os séculos XVIII (um terramoto que literalmente arrasou o país, tendo sido sentido até na Irlanda) o séc. XIX (perda do Brasil, invasões, massacres, terra queimada, seguidos de uma guerra civil e várias revoltas populares esmagadas com sangue), veio então a 1ª República, durante a qual houve muita fome e uma crise económica pior. Isto (a miséria e a violência sofridas) tornou o nosso povo fraco e submisso, não o Estado Novo. O nosso povo já era descrito como sendo assim por escritores como Pascoaes, muito antes de Salazar. Malucos por futebol é agora. Por exemplo, no tempo de Salazar, o hóquei em patins era tão popular quanto o futebol, o ciclismo dava cartas (as populações paravam para ver passar a Volta a Portugal) e os deportos tradicionais (chinquilho, por exemplo) estavam por toda a parte. Não me venha também com a Fátima e com o Fado, (três F), pois isso também são mitos: para além do fado havia o folclore (altamente promovido) e surgiram as primeiras bandas pop e rock na década de 60, caso dos Sheiks, entre outros (onde, já agora, as mulheres começaram a andar de mini-saia e biquini, havendo fotos que o demonstram). Fátima e a religião podem ser considerados alienantes, mas hoje ao domingo também vai tudo para o shopping alienado prestar culto ao Deus-consumo (prefiro o Deus de Fátima, que ao menos ensina valores espirituais). Analfabetismo? Os dados relativos a 1970 (Pordata, etc.) indicam analfabetismo MUITO INFERIOR a metade da população (24%, sobretudo idosos) e muito inferior ao período pré-Salazar.. Em termos económicos, não foi desastre nenhum: salvou Portugal da bancarrota, e todos os dados indicam crescimento ano após ano. Pobreza havia (as pessoas do campo tinham 6 e 7 filhos, se fosse hoje e tivessem o mesmo número de filhos também seriam pobres). Mas também foi com Salazar e as milhares de escolas que ele construiu que foram lançadas as bases para uma classe média forte, que tivemos durante as décadas de 70, 80 e 90. Há que ter em mente que Salazar apanhou um país SÉCULOS atrasado em relação à generalidade da Europa Ocidental. Se em 1970 o país estava 20 anos atrasado em relação a esses países.... pois, Roma e Pavia não se fizeram num dia. De referir contudo, que países como Malta e a Irlanda não eram mais avançados do que nós, e não tiveram lá Salazar nenhum. É sempre complicado um país periférico evoluir tão rapidamente quanto os outros. Em suma, estude mais um bocadinho e não vá atrás de tudo aquilo que ouve.
@PauloTheWinger11 Жыл бұрын
Ah, e na questão do isolacionismo, isso também é falso. Fomos membros-fundadores da NATO e da EFTA, ou não fomos? A expressão "Orgulhosamente sós" aplicou-se num contexto específico, quando os nossos "aliados"norte-americanos votaram contra nós na ONU e o Reino Unido e a França se abstiveram.
@Duck-wc9de Жыл бұрын
The problem plagging the first republic wasnt the anti-religion movement, it was more the shear instability. Portugal had 45 governments in 16 years, meaning that the average government lasted 4 months.
@longiusaescius2537 Жыл бұрын
anti religion contributed
@inkphoenix5446 Жыл бұрын
In Portugal we don't remember Salazar in a very good light, sure he did bring some stability from the first republics. But his secret police, PIDE ("Polícia Internacional de Defesa do Estado"; aka "International State Defense Police") persecuted, tortured and killed our people if we even dared to criticize the government, free speech was pratically non-existent during the Estado Novo decades. We have to thank people like José Mário Branco, Zéca Afonso, Mário Soares, and others for giving us hope during those dark times.
@NewEnglandInSeattle18 күн бұрын
Well, this explains a lot. My family grew up under Salazar and loved him. I couldn't understand why they would love a dictator. But my family was very Roman Catholic. I didn't realize Catholics and the Catholic church was persecuted before Salazar.
@Alkusanat6 ай бұрын
Don't try to make him llok like a good person! Salazar was fascist or rather as close to one as one can be... he idolized Mussolini and even had his portrait on his desk, had friendly connections to Franco's Spain, with Mussolini's Italy (from who he brought fascist architecture to Portugal by recruiting Mussolini's architects to the country) and Hitler's Germany since he considered them to be too pagan for his taste but even so he borrowed a lot from their ideals. He implemented christian corporatism which was heavily related to Mussolini's ideals and his government was a combination of authoritarian nationalist, conservative and anti-liberal tendencies. And by the way.,.. as for the higher literacy you mentioned, he just raised the compulsory education from the 3rd to the 4th grade... nothing more. The finances did become better at first by making everyone except the already wealthy families, as poor as possible, and under the thumb of the catholic church who were his biggest allies... And when we entered the colonial war the he and Marcelo extended as much as possible, all that extra wealth was spent in a war only they still wanted to keep going for 13 years... thousands of young men were forcedly conscripted and if the attempted to escape or showed any signs of leaning left, they would be sento to the front lines, forced to work in the offices of PIDE (the state police that dealt with any political dissention by arresting, torturing and killing and even trained Gestapo officers in Portugal during 1930's) or sent to the state ran concentration camp of Tarrafal, in Cape Verde. So, he might not have been exactly like the other fascist governments, but he behaved like one in so many aspects. So many killed, tortured and forced into exile. It was the military and the Portuguese people, who ended the regime he created and since then we became a much more modern country in a democracy, with all the good and all the bad that it caries with it, but at least we are free of 48 years of terror!
@IMAC17766 ай бұрын
Salazar won a poll of the greatest Portuguese of all time and the poll took place in this century! I don’t think Hitler would manage that in Germany. That suggests many Portuguese see him as more of a benevolent dictator than a tyrant.
@Alkusanat6 ай бұрын
@@IMAC1776 people forget history... that's why we currently have 50 fascists in parliament. And it's happening all over the world. And Germany makes sure to criminalize any nazi remnants that show up, and they actually affected the whole world. Salazar closed the country on it self, having most people as uneducated as possible to make anyone easy to control. He was a pile of shit, responsible for thousands of death people, had whole villages massacred in Africa during the colonial war, used his political police to torture anyone speaking up against him, had a concentration camp in Africa for political adversaries, where those who tried to escape, would be put in a metal box under the sun, to be cooked alive for days... even if he had done something good, he was responsible for crimes against humanity, and that should have never been forgotten!
@janicerich49372 ай бұрын
@@Alkusanat The hilarity of you calling democratically elected parliament members fascists it fascinating.
@lucydelgado969 Жыл бұрын
Altho he did a lot of great stuff for Portugal's economy both my granparents and my parents generation keep a heavy trauma of what they went through during the regime. The censorship, the governamental police that we called PIDE , the war in africa, my grandpa had to cut is pinky so he didnt go to war because he like a lot of people didnt actually care if mozambique or angola were independent or not he just wanted to be with his family and marry my grandma. There was a lot of sadness and fear during his regime, people were very careful with the ideas they would say in fear that someone might denounce them to PIDE of conspiracy against the government , and anyone was fair game , u could even denounce someone of conspiracy even when it wasnt true just because u didnt like them. My mom says that she and her siblings had to share one sardine because there wasnt much food and she started helping my grandma when she was 12 yo and this reality was very common back in the day since my friends's parents all have similar a story. My grandma says when the revolution took place she never felt so much disapointment at her own country and the world she grew up in just didnt exist and was a bunch of lies they indoctrinate them but at least she felt truly free.
@eusoueu5504 Жыл бұрын
Ya, mas a cena da economia ser boa é também exagerada, pois embora tenha "crescido" foi de uma forma muito desigual, e o crescimento podia ter sido muito maior se ele abandonasse o corporativismo e abrisse a economia. Os meus avós paternos fugiriam a pé para França, os meus maternos não sei muito, mas o meu avô participou no 25 de abril
@brigidspencer5123 Жыл бұрын
Salazar was a very controversial and polarizing figure, people either hated or loved him and he admired Adolf Hitler to the point where he punished one of his ministers who assisted in helping Jews escape the Nazis. Most of my relatives spoke frequently of the crushing poverty and the secret police, even in the churches. Salazar was a Fascist Dictator, not someone to admire.
@Icefrostmiguel11 ай бұрын
O Marcello Caetano abriu a economia, acabou com a pide, deu reformas aos idosos e abriu as fronteiras. O país cresceu super rápido no mandato. A paga que o povo lhe deu foi um golpe de estado e o exílio.
@bajbajgarbaj Жыл бұрын
Great video!
@vascoamaral5309 Жыл бұрын
Cuidado com a cadeira Salazar...
@slendii366 Жыл бұрын
😂
@ultraimprovement6 ай бұрын
Ok, but you didn’t even tell the bad things he did
@janicerich49372 ай бұрын
Like what?
@Raiannnnnn883 күн бұрын
Quais?
@RafaelBarbosa-xn6sj Жыл бұрын
As a Portuguese, no, Salazar didn't turned Portugal in a wealthy nation. In fact it was the opposite
@fcphsd Жыл бұрын
As anyone with a bit of cleverness can see from Rafael's comment, Portuguese people cant reach the true anymore. I'm also Portuguese and know that 99% of these people are completely alienated from the truth. Portugal needs another Salazar but Secret Societies will never allow that. In the matter of fact, international elites already won the Cultural war here a long time ago...
@DkSilv42 ай бұрын
Não sabes o que falas
@fredericocr1 Жыл бұрын
He did not leave a wealthy nation.
@hotman_pt_ Жыл бұрын
he did leave however a more wealthy nation than today or before the dictatorship, comparing with other countries.
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
Portugal is impoverished, brutally indebted and without a national strategy
@Pres.Shinra Жыл бұрын
This is very incorrect, Portugal was very poor.... The economy might have "boomed" but because it was so small and still remained very underdeveloped
@hotman_pt_ Жыл бұрын
it was still more wealthy than today or before the regime, comparing to the standarts
@br3menPT Жыл бұрын
Tens que estudar mais! Não adiante repetir as mentiras dos partidos políticos....Estuda!!!!! Get your facts right! You need to get some real information! Portugal was even poorest before Salazar and guess what? Nowadays Portugal is poor and already asked for 3 bailouts in just 34 years.....
@Mpl3564 Жыл бұрын
Correct. Portugal was much poorer at that time and with a much worse social situation by any measurable standadrf (income, health, education and so on). This place is full of pro-dictatorship assholes that possibly were a privileged minority at that time (or descend from the few priviliged). Very bafdly attended.
@Icefrostmiguel11 ай бұрын
My Father is 68 year old and only lived in Marcello Caetano's time. He tells me he is the most underrated statesman of Portuguese history. When the revolution took place the country already joined an economic union, opened its economy, started eletrification, had a GDP growth over 10%, PIDE was abolished for DGS which only acted in coup and cold war matters (targeted URSS agentd). School was reformed, pensions were given to the poor and getting a visa was easier than in Salazar's time. The reaction people had was to make a revolution and exile him. My father is not a statesman but was a farmer who suddendly was able to study for free in a good public school thanks to this Politician. Media made Marcello's image miserable, unfair and disproportional. People spit on what was given to them.
@PauloTheWinger11 Жыл бұрын
I'm speechless. Totally unbiased information, unlike (too) many things we find about Salazar online these days. Congratulations. Excellent work.
@diogoleite916 Жыл бұрын
Portugal is a very underrrated and forgotten country if we compare His magnificent Past
@-jdb_89_mgr_pt- Жыл бұрын
Portugal is the greatest small country in the world...😎😎😎😎👍👍✌✌❤❤
@ivanbarbosa816 ай бұрын
He had a death worthy of a dictator.Fell from a chair 🪑.So ironic
@antoniosousa3115 Жыл бұрын
I used to say “Portugal is forgotten 9 months of the year” but now you can’t talk portuguese in the middle of Lisboa, too many tourists, personally i love the spanish and the italian and i like the british in Algarve because the pay tequila shots to everyone
@RANDOMSHITRANDOM Жыл бұрын
I loved the touch of the "A Portuguesa" near the end! It is an epic ensamble and the proud instrumental of our national anthem!
@joaojonito3764 Жыл бұрын
Finnaly someone remembers that Salazar existed
@icommitarson Жыл бұрын
My grandma worked as a maid for Salazar and apparently he was very touchy and flirty and quite a weirdo
@wilkic2 Жыл бұрын
Sure buddy… 😂😂😂
@carlrodi-jr5pr Жыл бұрын
You got D. Pedro Ii " story wrong! He was removed from power. He passed away long after that.
@fall3n4ngel24 Жыл бұрын
What did I just watch. As a portuguese, I can't help but feel offended by this video. Dictatorship sugarcoating is priceless
@davidsilva5444 Жыл бұрын
The economie didnt boom, the state volts were full, but the pockets of the people empty. Education was just until the 4th grade, infant mortality was high
@PedrokasxD Жыл бұрын
Vejo muitos a falar mal dele, mas em 2007 foi considerado o melhor português de todos os tempos... Na verdade em mais de 100 anos de república, não tivemos outro melhor... Agora temos políticos que em vez de ter média de 20 a economia e finanças e irem para cargos político por mérito, tiram a licenciatura ao fim de semana e ocupam cargos políticos por convite de amizade... Não sei se choro ou se rio, mas tudo isto é triste tudo isto é fado 😂 desculpem não ter escrito em inglês beacause o que é nacional é bom 😂
@michaelchen86432 ай бұрын
I would assert that his lack of visibility as a leader and a dictator, and an autocrat gave Portugal some breathing room so they could develop without any kind of international acrimony in this way actually got the best of both worlds and so did Portugal
@michaelchen86432 ай бұрын
Portugal had an important international relationship that probably kept it above water when it came to his reputation and that is 600+ your relationship with united kingdom and willingness to allow the Azores to be used by the allies as a base for air and sea transport during World War 2 Unlike Spain, there was no major war fought with millions of lives taken And the use of Nazi Germany’s war machine to prosecute this war Portugal dictatorial administration was seen as benign on the world stage and perhaps even benevolent
@anakin3060 Жыл бұрын
The greatest Portuguese citizen ever.
@icommitarson Жыл бұрын
No
@anakin3060 Жыл бұрын
@@icommitarson as in voted by the majority of Portuguese people in 2007
@costa2k1 Жыл бұрын
@@anakin3060 the poll was conducted in a Right Wing manifestation
@anakin3060 Жыл бұрын
@@costa2k1 Actually that contest was conducted by RTP, Portuguese State Television, a pro-Socialist tv state run tv channel.
@Mr.Lopes145 ай бұрын
Hey I love that video you made talk portugal history ❤🇵🇹 and June 10 is day of portugal
@sn4tx Жыл бұрын
As a Portuguese, I realise that at that time and up to WWII, he did his best for the nation. In an international scenario. But within Portuguese borders and it’s colonies, it was hell. Today, after all these years, it’s easy to glorify Salazar and many even miss him. But let me put this way. I’m in my very late 30s. And all of you reading this, wherever you from, can accordingly to your situation make a comparison. In my family I was the first to be born as a free human. I grew up with that feeling. As I got older I started to realise what I meant to this country side family. Not only that, I was born in the 25th of April. I grew being always called by my family, and even extended family, as the “o 25 de Abril”. It was like a nickname. It took me decades to realise what that meant to them. Many people have different notions of what is the definition of freedom. For some freedom is the right to have weapons, or the right to say whatever you want. Whatever your notion of freedom is, which by all means valid, one doesn’t know what freedom truly is until one loses it. Luckily I didn’t experience a life without freedom but I grew up with people who experienced what is like to be deprived of freedom. That shaped me to who I am today. That reflects to this day (within my family) who I am what I stand for. My family have a military tradition. As far as I can pinpoint, since my great grandfather to my father and uncle, every single man in my family were military. So for me it was a very natural step. After high school I joined the military. I was the last of my family to do so. Recent events like the Ukrainian- Russo war makes me loose my appetite. Makes me wish I was younger. It hurts me deeply. It’s upsetting this reaction of all European nations. It’s crazy how this war been going for this long. And we just sit here. Watching the news. Scrolling the internet. Even at some point just ignoring what an European country is going trough, when many of us in recent history were in their position. Fuck dictatorships. We should never give up fighting for freedom.
@soweco2969 Жыл бұрын
Vocês Portugueses são tudo uns esquerdinha seboso hoje em dia em?
@marcosnunes6684 Жыл бұрын
👏👏👏
@truthismycause2800 Жыл бұрын
Muito bem, jovem.
@truthismycause2800 Жыл бұрын
@@soweco2969 Vai para o (_)_)::::D bolsonhento terceiro-mundista.
@Overlorde79 Жыл бұрын
Se tu achas que és livre agora,estás muito tapadinho.
@dmachado24 ай бұрын
So uh Salazar was invited to the governament but only accepted with some conditions.
@duartesilva7907 Жыл бұрын
Salazar turned Portugal into a wealthy country? Come on, that's not even remotely true. Portugal in 1974 was closer to Romania or Albania in terms of development and quite far from the development present in Spain, France, Italy and other Western countries. A lot of socioeconomic data corroborates this
@hubertusvenator5838 Жыл бұрын
In 1975, Spain had the world's eight largest economy. Now, it has the world's sixteenth largest economy.
@pequenoaviador7779 Жыл бұрын
Como portugues ele melhorou o país mas nao ao ponto de o fazer uma mega economia
@wolfgang6517 Жыл бұрын
Portugal Literally had oil in Cabinda
@charmyzard Жыл бұрын
How can this man be forgotten when he's got a spinning portrait mod in HOI4? HOI4?
@Bonanca_27 Жыл бұрын
How does this sound like a compliment to Salazar He was a dictator. The benefits you claim are very inflanted and completly miss the oppression suffered by the portuguese people. (PIDE, sending 18 year old to africa to fight, etc) Not to say that portugal at time of the revolucion was stuck in a sociaty of the 30s With barely any modern industry, slums in the capital etc Next time be more careful in portraing the "good" side of a dictator He is considered a dictator for a reason And there was a revolution for a reason
@wolfgang6517 Жыл бұрын
Revolução de cobardes que nao queriam cumprir o dever lmao
@Mpl3564 Жыл бұрын
Perfect.
@redsoup25847 ай бұрын
He became a dictator for a reason too.
@markuhler2664 Жыл бұрын
Interesting, didn't know Portugal was a dictatorship during this time. Or the anti-Catholicism at the beginning of the 20th century, which seems wild considering how Catholic the country is. Given that he was a dictator and that he seemed to have done some good for yhe country, and seemed to place the country above himself, he almost seems like a Doctor Doom kind of guy. The nicest totalitarian I've ever heard about.
@yvonetubla7682 Жыл бұрын
tf? portugal isn't catholic
@markuhler2664 Жыл бұрын
@@yvonetubla7682 From the Cultural Atlas website: "Today, the vast majority of Portuguese identify as Roman Catholic (81%).1 However, most consider themselves as non-practising. For many, national and cultural identity is often linked to Catholicism, rather than purely a religious affiliation. Of the remaining population, 3.3% identify with some other denomination of Christianity, 0.6% identify with some other religion (including those who identify as Jewish or Muslim), 6.8% identify with no religion, and 8.3% did not specify a religious affiliation.2 ... ...However, apart from major celebrations, church attendance is quite low. Generally, people who reside in cities and larger towns (particularly in Lisbon and the south) are less involved in the daily practice of Catholicism. On the other hand, those residing in central and northern Portugal tend to show their religiosity more. For example, attendance of Mass, honouring saints, processions and celebrating religious holidays are participated in more devoutly. ‘Romarias’ (pilgrimages) to regional shrines are also a core religious practice, especially in northern Portugal ..." 1 Central Intelligence Agency, 2020 2 Central Intelligence Agency, 2020 Okay, it's culturally Catholic. Only 6.8% of people call themselves atheist or agnostic. I, and most people, would call that Catholic. What's your criteria? 70% attendance at daily mass? A majority of schools and businesses starting the day with a rosary and saying the Angelus in the afternoon? Tax breaks for families who have members take Holy Orders?