Adrião Acácio da Silveira Pinto
Adrião Acácio da Silveira Pinto | |||||||||||
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Governor of Macau | |||||||||||
In office 22 February 1837 – 3 October 1843 | |||||||||||
Preceded by | Bernardo José de Sousa Soares Andrea | ||||||||||
Succeeded by | José Gregório Pegado | ||||||||||
Governor of Angola | |||||||||||
In office 1848–1851 | |||||||||||
Preceded by | Pedro Alexandrino da Cunha | ||||||||||
Succeeded by | António Sérgio de Sousa | ||||||||||
Personal details | |||||||||||
Died | 1868 | ||||||||||
Nationality | Portuguese | ||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 邊度 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 边度 | ||||||||||
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Adrião Acácio da Silveira Pinto (born late 18th century – died 1868) served as a staff officer (Captain, later Lieutenant-General) during Liberal Wars in the Duke of Terceira's army which landed in the Algarve and marched north to Lisbon in 1833.[1] Later he was appointed to be a Portuguese colonial administrator who held the position of Governor of Macau between 1837 and 1843. During the Opium Wars, fearing Chinese reprisals he requested the British community to leave Macau. The British sailed off to Hong Kong on August 1839.[2][3] Later he was Governor-General of the Province of Angola between 1848 and 1851.[1] As a governor of Angola, Pinto acknowledged that enslaved individuals, particularly Black Africans, had a natural inclination to escape slavery, and this was partly attributed to slave owners using them as itinerant traders in the interior regions (sertões) of Angola, which provided ample opportunities for escape.[4]
See also
References
- ^ a b Ron B. Thomson (11 September 2014). The Concession of Évora Monte: The Failure of Liberalism in Nineteenth-Century Portugal. Lexington Books. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-7391-9332-7.
- ^ Philippe Pons (2002). Macao. Reaktion Books. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-1-86189-136-5.
- ^ Geoffrey C. Gunn (1996). Encountering Macau: A Portuguese City-State on the Periphery of China, 1557-1999. Westview Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8133-8970-7.
- ^ Ferreira, Roquinaldo. "Slave flights and runaway communities in Angola (17th-19th centuries)." Anos 90 21.40 (2014): 65-90.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Bernardo José de Sousa Soares Andrea | Governor of Macau 1837–1843 | Succeeded by José Gregório Pegado |
Preceded by Pedro Alexandrino da Cunha | Governor of Angola 1848–1851 | Succeeded by António Sérgio de Sousa |
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17th century |
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18th century |
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19th century |
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20th century |
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