Adriano Moreira

For the Portuguese footballer, see Adriano Moreira (footballer).
Adriano Moreira
ComC GCC GOIH GCSE
Member of the Council of State
Assumed office
12 January 2016
Appointed by Assembly of the Republic
President Aníbal Cavaco Silva
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
Member of the Assembly of the Republic
Elections: 1980, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1991
In office
13 August 1987  26 October 1995
Constituency Lisbon District
In office
31 May 1983  12 August 1987
Constituency Porto District
In office
13 November 1980  30 May 1983
Constituency Bragança District
Minister of the Overseas Provinces
In office
13 April 1961  4 December 1962
President Américo Tomás
Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar
Preceded by Vasco Lopes Alves
Succeeded by António Augusto Peixoto Correia
Personal details
Born Adriano José Alves Moreira
(1922-09-15) 15 September 1922
Grijó de Vale Benfeito, Macedo de Cavaleiros, Portugal
Political party CDS – People's Party (1979-present)
Spouse(s) Mónica Isabel Maia de Lima Mayer
Children 6
Alma mater University of Lisbon
Complutense University of Madrid
Profession Lawyer
Professor
Religion Roman Catholicism

Adriano José Alves Moreira, ComC GCC GOIH GCSE (born September 15, 1922, Grijó de Vale Benfeito, Macedo de Cavaleiros, Portugal),[1] is a Portuguese statesman, lawyer, professor and retired politician. Adriano Moreira was a top political figure in Portugal throughout the second half of the 20th century.

Education

Adriano Moreira was born in Macedo de Cavaleiros, northern Portugal, son of António José Moreira and wife Leopoldina do Céu Alves, and graduated in Law from the University of Lisbon in 1944. Later he would be awarded a doctorate from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

Adriano Moreira started as a sympathizer of the Portuguese Democratic Opposition movement, signing a list of the MUD in 1945. He was the lawyer of the family of general José Marques Godinho, when he was arrested and later died in prison for his attempt to overthrow the Salazar regime in 1947. The family of the general sued the minister Fernando Santos Costa for his alleged responsibility in the death and was all arrested because of that, like Adriano Moreira himself.

He became with time closer to the New State. He was chosen to be the Portuguese minister for Overseas under António de Oliveira Salazar's Estado Novo regime. Noted for the legislative reforms that he introduced during his two years (1961–1963) as Minister of the Overseas Provinces (Ministro do Ultramar) during the New State (at Salazar's invitation). From this period are the foundation of two university institutions in Portuguese Angola and Mozambique - Estudos Gerais Universitários de Moçambique and Estudos Gerais Universitários de Angola. A brief two-year spell in Brazilian exile marked the short path between two political regimes (pre- and post- 1974 Carnation Revolution) for Adriano Moreira.

His influence over the CDS – People's Party, the conservative party of which he was President and which he represented as a deputy in the Portuguese Parliament from 1979, was to be more permanent, and from where he was to occupy an important place in the development of post-Carnation Revolution politics. He was Vice-President of the Assembly of the Republic between 1991 and 1995.

For decades he was a professor at the Instituto Superior de Ciências Sociais e Políticas of the Universidade Técnica de Lisboa (Technical University of Lisbon).

His published works include "A Europa em Formação", Lisboa, 1974, "Ciência Política", Lisboa, 1979, "Teoria das Relações Internacionais", Coimbra, 1996.

He married at São Martinho, Sintra, on August 30, 1968 Isabel Mónica Maia de Lima Mayer, born at Mercês, Lisbon, on August 2, 1945, whose paternal grandfather had distant Ashkenazi Jewish and Sephardic Jewish ancestry and whose paternal grandmother was Irish, and had six children.

Although no longer involved in active politics, Adriano Moreira is still an influential voice in the country. He is one of the five personalities elected by the Assembly of the Republic to the Council of State on 18 December 2015, and he took office on 12 January 2016.

Decorations and affiliations

References

  1. "Adriano José Alves Moreira." GeneAll.net. Web. 13 Nov. 2010. <http://www.geneall.net/P/per_page.php?id=21204>.

External links

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