Júlio de Castilhos
President of Rio Grande do Sul
In office
25 January 1893  25 January 1898
Preceded byFernando Abbott
Succeeded byBorges de Medeiros
In office
17 June 1892  17 June 1892
Preceded byViscount of Pelotas
Succeeded byVitorino Monteiro
In office
15 July 1891  12 November 1891
Preceded byFernando Abbott
Succeeded byGoverning Junta (acting)
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
15 November 1890  14 July 1891
ConstituencyRio Grande do Sul
Personal details
Born(1860-06-29)29 June 1860
Cruz Alta, Rio Grande do Sul, Empire of Brazil
(now Júlio de Castilhos)
Died24 October 1903(1903-10-24) (aged 43)
Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Political partyPRR (1882–1903)
Spouse
Honorina Martins França da Costa
(m. 1883)
Children6
Parents
  • Francisco Ferreira Castilhos (father)
  • Carolina de Carvalho Prates (mother)
Alma materFaculty of Law of Largo de São Francisco
OccupationEditor-in-chief of A Federação
Profession
  • Journalist
  • politician
Militia service
AllegianceRepublicans
Years of service1893–1895
Battles/warsFederalist Revolution

Júlio Prates de Castilhos (Cruz Alta, 29 June 1860 – Porto Alegre, 24 October 1903) was a Brazilian journalist and politician, having been elected Patriarch of Rio Grande do Sul.[1]

Politics

He was elected twice as the governor of Rio Grande do Sul and was the principal author of the State Constitution of 1891 and a model for many future politicians of the region.[2] He disseminated positivist ideas in Brazil.

On 15 July 1891, Castilhos was elected president of the state of Rio Grande do Sul. However, with the 3 November coup of Deodoro da Fonseca, he was deposed that year.[1] He re-ran for the same office one year later, without adversaries, and regained his old post. Less than a year later, the unsuccessful Federalist Revolution began, with one of the rebel force's demands being his removal from power.[3] His opposers claimed that the State Constitution granted the state governor near-dictatorial powers.

Castilhism

Castilhism was a political theory instituted by Júlio de Castilhos in Rio Grande do Sul, having as characteristics the centralization of powers in the Executive, the institution of mechanisms of direct participation, such as plebiscites and popular referendums; the establishment of a modernizing, interventionist and regulating State of the economy, in addition to its intermediary and moralizing role in society.

Personal life

Castilhos and his wife, Honorina, had six children.

Death

Júlio de Castilhos died prematurely in 1903, a victim of throat cancer.

Legacy

1231 Duque de Caxias, the last house in which he lived was acquired by the state, following the death of his widow in 1905. The house was converted into the Júlio de Castilhos Museum (Museu Júlio de Castilhos) in the centre of Porto Alegre, the oldest museum in Rio Grande do Sul. The politician was also honoured in the capital with the construction of a large monument in the Praça da Matriz (Matriz Square). The Júlio de Castilhos State School in Porto Alegre and the town of Júlio de Castilhos, where he was born, were named in his honour.

References

  1. 1 2 "Júlio Prates de Castilhos" (in Brazilian Portuguese). Universo Online - Education. 25 April 2006. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  2. Bakos, Margaret (2006). Júlio de Castilhos: Positivismo, abolição e república (in Brazilian Portuguese). EDIPUCRS. p. 9. ISBN 85-7430-601-0.
  3. "Na Revolução Federalista, em 1893, senadores chegaram a pegar em armas". Senado Federal (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2015-08-03. Retrieved 19 May 2018.

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