Processo Revolucionário Em Curso governing bodies
The Processo Revolucionário Em Curso (English: Ongoing Revolutionary Process) is the period of the history of Portugal from the Carnation Revolution on 25 April 1974 to the establishment of a new constitution and the legislative elections on 25 April 1976. The turbulent period saw a number of governing bodies.
Council of State
Portuguese Council of State, from 31 May 1974[1]
- Citizens: Diogo de Freitas do Amaral, Henrique de Barros, Almeida Bruno, Isabel Magalhães Colcaco, Rafael Durão, Ruy Luis Gomes, Azeredo Perdigão
- National Salvation Junta (JSN): José Pinheiro de Azevedo, António Rosa Coutinho, Francisco da Costa Gomes, Jaime Silvério Marques, Carlos Galvão de Melo, Diogo Neto, António de Spínola
- Movimento das Forças Armadas (MFA): Vítor Alves^, Ernesto Melo Antunes, Almada Contreiras, Victor Crespo, Vasco Gonçalves^, Costa Martins^, Pereira Pinto
^ replaced in the second government by Vasco Lourenço, Franco Charais, Canto e Castro
Committee of Twenty
Committee of Twenty, from 28 September 1974[1]
- Air Force: Canto e Castro, Pereira Pinto, Mendes Dias, Pinho Freire, Costa Martins
- Army: Franco Charais, Vasco Lourenço, P. Soares, Carlos Fabião, Francisco da Costa Gomes, F.L. Pires, Vítor Alves, Ernesto Melo Antunes, Vasco Gonçalves, Otelo S. Carvalho
- Navy: Almada Contreiras, Miguel Judas, José Pinheiro de Azevedo, António Rosa Coutinho, Victor Crespo
First Council of the Revolution
First Council of the Revolution, from 11 March 1975[1]
Second Council of the Revolution
Second Council of the Revolution, from 5 September 1975[1]
Third Council of the Revolution
Third Council of the Revolution, from 28 November 1975,[1] following the Coup of 25 November 1975
gollark: No, reacting just means to do something, that could be overreacting, underreacting *or* reacting the right amount.
gollark: No, we need to react the right amount.
gollark: I mean, I suppose if you're dead you're less likely to be hired.
gollark: I doubt it, not sure how that would work.
gollark: Definitely still bad though, but not *that* bad.
References
- Hugo Gil Ferreira, Michael W. Marshall, Portugal's Revolution: Ten Years On, Cambridge University Press (2011 [1986]), pp. 63-4
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