Artur Bernardes

Artur Bernardes
Official portrait, 1922
President of Brazil
In office
15 November 1922 – 15 November 1926
Vice PresidentEstácio Coimbra
Preceded byEpitácio Pessoa
Succeeded byWashington Luís
Other offices held
1952–1953Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1951–1951Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1946–1951Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1935–1937Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1927–1930Senator for Minas Gerais
1918–1922President of Minas Gerais
1915–1918Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1910–1914Secretary of Finance of Minas Gerais
1909–1910Federal Deputy for Minas Gerais
1907–1909State Deputy of Minas Gerais
1906–1906Mayor of Viçosa
1906–1906President of the Municipal Chamber of Viçosa
1905–1906Councillor of Viçosa
Personal details
Born(1875-08-08)8 August 1875
Viçosa, Minas Gerais, Empire of Brazil
Died23 March 1955(1955-03-23) (aged 79)
Rio de Janeiro, Federal District, Brazil
Cause of deathMyocardial infarction
Resting placeSão João Batista Cemetery
Political partyPRM (c. 1904–1937)
UDN (1945)
PR (1945–1955)
Spouse
Clélia Vaz de Melo
(m. 1903)
Children8, including Artur Filho
Alma materFaculty of Law of São Paulo (LL.B.)
Occupation
  • Lawyer
  • journalist
  • landowner
Signature

Artur da Silva Bernardes (Portuguese: [aʁˈtuʁ da ˈsiwvɐ beʁˈnaʁdʒis]; 8 August 1875 – 23 March 1955) was a Brazilian lawyer and politician who served the 12th president of Brazil from 1922 to 1926. Bernades' presidency was marked by the crisis of the First Brazilian Republic and the almost uninterrupted duration of a state of emergency. During his long political career, from 1905 until his death, he was the main leader of the Republican Party of Minas Gerais (PRM) from 1918–1922 until the party's extinction in 1937, and founder and leader of the Republican Party (PR).

Before his presidency, Bernardes served as governor of Minas Gerais from 1918 to 1922, during which time he founded the current Federal University of Viçosa and prevented American investor Percival Farquhar from exploiting the iron ore deposits in Itabira, cultivating an image of a nationalist and municipalist leader. A status quo and "milk coffee" candidate in the 1922 presidential election, Bernardes was the target of fake letters to harm his image and an attempted coup d'état to prevent his inauguration, the Copacabana Fort revolt. His administration was unpopular in the cities, especially in Rio de Janeiro, and from July 1924 onwards he was attacked by conspiracies and armed uprisings by tenentist rebels.

Bernardes' attitude towards the opposition was uncompromising and authoritarian. Out of the states that opposed his candidacy, Rio de Janeiro and Bahia had their dominant parties overthrown, and Rio Grande do Sul fell into a civil war, the Revolution of 1923, in which the federal government brokered a peace deal. In the capital, the political police were reorganized into the 4th Auxiliary Police Bureau. Hundreds of rebel military personnel, worker activists, especially anarchists, and other civilians died in the bombing of São Paulo and the penal colony of Clevelândia. No amnesty was granted to the rebels.

The administration also applied an economic policy of austerity and monetary contraction, fighting inflation and currency devaluation, withdrew Brazil from the League of Nations, carried out a centralizing constitutional reform, the only one to the Brazilian Constitution of 1891, brought the State closer to the Catholic Church, and approved some labor laws while simultaneously repressing unions. After his presidency, Bernardes supported the Revolution of 1930, but in the following years he saw the PRM reduced to a minority faction in Minas Gerais. In his last years he participated in the Oil Campaign. An austere and reserved man, Bernardes was idolized by his followers, the so-called Bernardists, and hated by his enemies.


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