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Night of Agony

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The old Town Hall and Jail (Cadeia Velha), now the Tiradentes Palace, where the Brazilian Constituent Assembly of 1823 and a night of agony took place. It is also the first headquarters of the Chamber of Deputies.

The Night of Agony (Portuguese: Noite da Agonia) was a historical event in the Brazilian Empire, occurring in the pre-dawn hours of 12 November 1823, when emperor Dom Pedro I ordered the army to invade and dissolve the Brazilian Constituent Assembly. The assembly resisted for several hours, but in the end was dissolved and a few of its members were imprisoned and deported, including the brothers José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva, Martim Francisco Ribeiro de Andrada and Antônio Carlos Ribeiro de Andrada.

The following year, on 25 March 1824, a new Imperial Constitution was adopted, which designed an Executive, Legislative, and Judicial powers, but also a moderating power, which invested in the Emperor the title of "Moderator", acting as a neutral intermediary between the branches.

References

  1. Hippolito, Lucia. "A noite da agonia". O Globo. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
  2. Cola da Web. "Assembléia Constituinte de 1823". História do Brasil. Retrieved 7 March 2013.
Coups d'état in Brazil
Empire of Brazil (1822–1889)
Republic (1889–present)
First Brazilian Republic (1889–1930)
Vargas Era (1930–1945)
Fourth Brazilian Republic (1946–1964)
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