Article

Embodying public opinion: from petitions to mass meetings in nineteenth-century Portugal

Details

Citation

Palacios Cerezales D (2011) Embodying public opinion: from petitions to mass meetings in nineteenth-century Portugal. e-Journal of Portuguese History, 9 (1), pp. 1-19. http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Portuguese_Brazilian_Studies/ejph/html/Summer11.html

Abstract
The establishment of representative government in Portugal implied the free participation of the citizenry in the formation of public opinion. The right to petition was initially understood as an individual form of participation, but soon it would be practiced through public gatherings, marches and other displays of the collective will of a multitude. Initially, most of those forms of popular participation were identified with riots and insurrections, but during the second half of the nineteenth century, the public meeting became institutionalized. This paper explores the process whereby political campaigns based on drafting petitions, collecting signatures, and holding public meetings became a legitimate political form.

Keywords
Portugal; history; petitioning; right to petition; nineteenth century; popular protest; social movements;

Journal
e-Journal of Portuguese History: Volume 9, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date30/06/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/16003
PublisherBrown University
Publisher URLhttp://www.brown.edu/…ml/Summer11.html
ISSN1645-6432