O Marquez de Pombal (folheto para poucos) by Manoel Caldas Cordeiro

(7 User reviews)   1245
By Reese Davis Posted on Mar 10, 2026
In Category - Clean Stories
Cordeiro, Manoel Caldas, 1869-1914 Cordeiro, Manoel Caldas, 1869-1914
Portuguese
Hey, I just finished this weird little book from 1901 that feels like a secret someone slipped under a door. It's called 'O Marquez de Pombal (folheto para poucos)' – literally 'a pamphlet for the few.' And that title is no joke. It’s a short, sharp, and angry piece about Portugal's infamous 18th-century prime minister, the Marquis of Pombal. The author, Manoel Caldas Cordeiro, isn't giving us a dry history lesson. He's staging a trial. He puts Pombal in the dock and accuses him of being a tyrant who crushed the old nobility and the powerful Jesuits to build a modern, absolute state. The real mystery isn't what Pombal did—it's why this writer, over a century later, is still so furious about it. Who was he writing for? What was his axe to grind? It reads like a political grenade disguised as a history pamphlet. It’s brief, it’s biased, and it’s absolutely fascinating as a snapshot of how history gets argued about long after the fact.
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Published in 1901, this isn't a novel or a standard biography. It's exactly what the title says: a pamphlet. Manoel Caldas Cordeiro uses this short format to launch a fierce attack on one of Portugal's most transformative and controversial figures.

The Story

The 'story' here is an argument. Cordeiro walks us through the major acts of Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, the 1st Marquis of Pombal. He focuses on Pombal's ruthless centralization of power after the devastating 1755 Lisbon earthquake. The narrative highlights how Pombal broke the influence of the traditional aristocracy and, most pointedly, expelled the Jesuit order from Portugal and its empire. Cordeiro paints Pombal not as a visionary reformer, but as a despot. He frames these actions as a brutal power grab, dismantling old institutions to place all authority in the hands of the king (and, by extension, Pombal himself). The pamphlet reads like a prosecutor's closing statement, listing the charges against a man Cordeiro clearly sees as a villain in Portugal's history.

Why You Should Read It

You don't read this for a balanced view. You read it to get inside a specific, passionate mindset from over a century ago. The energy is what grabs you. Cordeiro's prose isn't detached; it's charged with indignation. It makes you realize that history is never settled. Here's a writer in 1901, still fighting the political battles of the 1750s. It’s less about learning what Pombal did and more about witnessing how he was remembered and hated by certain people generations later. The pamphlet format is perfect for this—it's all killer, no filler, pure argument. It forces you to ask: Was Pombal a necessary modernizer or a cruel dictator? Cordeiro has his answer, and he's shouting it.

Final Verdict

This is a niche read, but a thrilling one for the right person. It's perfect for history fans who enjoy primary sources and unfiltered opinion. If you like seeing historical figures debated with fire, not just dry facts, this pamphlet is a gem. It’s also great for anyone interested in how national myths and political grudges are formed. It's not an introduction to Pombal—you'll need some background for it to make sense. But as a companion piece, as a shot of historical passion, it's utterly compelling. Think of it as a fiery, opinionated blog post from 1901.



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Sarah Brown
1 month ago

I didn't expect much, but the atmosphere created is totally immersive. I couldn't put it down.

Mary Martinez
1 year ago

Read this on my tablet, looks great.

Lucas Scott
1 year ago

The fonts used are very comfortable for long reading sessions.

Linda Brown
1 year ago

Perfect.

Aiden Ramirez
1 year ago

A bit long but worth it.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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