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Stu | all galleries >> Daily Bowl of Stu >> June 2005 > End of an era
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Belém Stu

End of an era

14 June 2005

412
There is an increasing sense that a line is being drawn under an important era in Portugal's recent history. I say this because two of the leading political actors of the 1974 coup and the ensuing two year revolution died within two days of each other. Vasco Gonçalves was Prime Minister from 19 July 1974 to 29 August 1975, the most radical phase of the Portuguese revolution. During his time in office, Gonçalves, who was a military appointee during the period of Provisional Governments, became increasingly sympathetic towards and supportive of the positions adopted by the Portuguese Communist Party - so much so that he became known as Comrade Gonçalves. Gonçalves died on 11 June. Álvaro Cunhal, who died on 13 June, had been a member of the Portuguese Communist Party from the earliest years of its existence, and was a leading figure in the opposition to Salazar and his authoritarian regime. During the 1930s Cunhal was arrested by the regime's police and sentenced to imprisonment at the disease-ridden fortress of Tarrafal on Cape Verde; however, whilst waiting to be transported, he managed to slip his guards and make good his escape to Moscow. From his exile in the Soviet Union, Cunhal became the leader of the clandestine communist party - the only organised left-wing opposition political party that remained in Portugal throughout the dictatorship. Following the successful military coup of 25 April 1974, Cunhal returned to Lisbon, where he expected the PCP to become the party of government. Fate was against him, though, as the PCP were soundly beaten into third place at the 1975 elections to the Constituent Assembly. This was a result that Cunhal would not accept, and this rejection only fed the flames of revolution, and led directly to Portugal's Verão Quente (Hot Summer) of 1975, when the PCP led a wave of land, factory and property occupations and expropriations, and when supporters of the PCP attempted to prevent deputies from entering parliament. The upshot of this was that the PCP became increasingly marginalised, with them eventually losing the only significant political actor who was sympathetic to their cause, with the removal of Vasco Gonçalves from office at the end of August 1975. Cunhal continued to lead the PCP until 1992, presiding over a declining and ageing political movement that is virtually restricted to small geographic areas in the Alentejo. He continued to be a thorn in the side of the party's new leaders - men who wanted to modernise the party and move away from the Stalinist orthodoxy - and led the conservative faction opposing any softening of the party line. As a sideline, Cunhal was also a fairly successful author, writing several novels under the nome-de-plume, Manuel Tiago - the most significant of which was Cinco Dias, Cinco Noites (Five Days, Five Nights), which was made into an award-winning film in 1996. With the death of these two intransigent political figures, the Carnation Revolution moves even further into history. As I have said before, however (if you are interested, here is the short discussion paper on this matter that I had published in the French journal Lusotopie a couple of years back [PDF]), that is no bad thing. BTW - another photo from Lisbon, taken a couple of weeks ago!


Long-haired Liam was swinging Ross at Foyers last year

Nikon D70 ,Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6G AF
1/1000s f/5.6 at 300.0mm full exif

other sizes: small medium original auto
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Dominic Kite16-Jun-2005 07:36
The detail in the center of the daisy's superb Stu. Great shot.
Johan Toll15-Jun-2005 22:13
Wonderful shot! Awesome details and colours!
Guest 15-Jun-2005 22:02
This is so clever, well done Stu
laine8215-Jun-2005 20:23
It's not just the death of the flower, it's how you have captured it. Voting.
Ian Clowes15-Jun-2005 20:21
Super shot.
Bob White15-Jun-2005 16:55
Lovely Photograph --- Sorry I thought it was a cake it must be the diet I'm on --- ooops
Guest 15-Jun-2005 15:18
Beautiful image, and a compelling and instructional insight into Portuguese politics. Thanks for both.
Karen Stuebing15-Jun-2005 08:36
Wonderful texture and a very evocative image. I like the antique white color of the petals echoed by the gold of the center. Just a Wow! shot.
Karen Leaf15-Jun-2005 02:07
The droopy petals are so fragile and crisp.
One of your best, Stu.
Elaine (etfitz)15-Jun-2005 01:12
Wonderful image! Great detail!
Coleen Perilloux Landry14-Jun-2005 23:46
It still carries food for butterflies. I enjoy your history.
jude14-Jun-2005 23:05
OHHH yes, Ian.. she does..lol
I was immediately drawn to this.. wonderful detail.. dead yet full of character..
No two flowers - as they wilt - curve and wither the same.. I like it - indviduality to the end.. well done, Stu
Guest 14-Jun-2005 22:58
Super. Like this better than "live" versions,
Guest 14-Jun-2005 22:35
This is just great,Stu.
Vote.
Si Kirk14-Jun-2005 22:30
nice photo, i guess nothing really lasts, thanks for the history, i am finding your DBOS both pleasing and informative, many thanks
Argishti Khachik14-Jun-2005 22:26
Terrific shot Stu! Like the composition. The light is perfect and the background is wonderful. Great contrast.
Guest 14-Jun-2005 22:25
Beautiful photo - great detail, clarity and depth of field.
northstar3714-Jun-2005 22:15
the droopiness
Guest 14-Jun-2005 22:04
I think someone called Jude is going to like this one! :-)