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SEBASTIAN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 566 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SEBASTIAN  ,

king of
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Portugal (
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Port . Sebastiao) (1554-1578), the
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posthumous son of Prince John of Portugal and of his wife SEBASTIANI Joanna, daughter of the emperor Charles, was born in 1554, and became king in 1557, on the
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death of his grandfather John III. of Portugal . During his minority (1557–1568), his
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grand-
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mother Queen Catherine and his
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great
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uncle the Cardinal Prince Henry acted jointly as regents . Sebastian's
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education was entrusted to a Jesuit, D . Luiz Concalves da Camara and to D . Aleixo de Menezes, a
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veteran who had served under Albuquerque . He grew up resolved to emulate the
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medieval knights who had reconquered Portugal from the Moors . He was a mystic and a fanatic, whose
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sole ambition was to lead a crusade against the Mahommedans in north-west Africa . He entrusted the government to the
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Jesuits; refused either to summon the Cortes or to marry, although the Portuguese
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crown would otherwise pass to a foreigner, and devoted himself wholly to hunting, martial exercises and the severest forms of
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asceticism . His first expedition to
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Morocco, in 1574, was little more than a reconnaissance; in a second expedition Sebastian was killed and his army annihilated at Al Kasr al Kebir (4th of August 1578) . Although his
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body was identified before
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burial at Al Kasr, reinterred at Ceuta, and thence (1582) removed by Philip II. of Spain to the Convento dos Jeronymos in Lisbon, many Portuguese refused to credit his death . " Sebastianism " became a religion .

Its votaries believed that the rei encuberto, or " hidden king," was either absent on a

pilgrimage, or, like King Arthur in Avalon, was awaiting the
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hour of his second advent in some enchanted island . Four pretenders to the
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throne successively impersonated Sebastian; the first two, known from their places of birth as the " King of Penamacor " and the " King of Ericeira," were of peasant origin; they were captured in 1584 and 1585 respectively . The third, Gabriel Espinosa, was a man of some education, whose adherents included members of the
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Austrian and
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Spanish courts and of the Society of Jesus in Portugal . He was executed in 1594 . The
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fourth was a Calabrian named Marco Tullio, who knew no Portuguese; he impersonated the " hidden king" at Venice in 1603 and gained many supporters, but was ultimately captured and executed . The Sebastianists had an important share in the Portuguese insurrection of 1640, and were again prominent during the Miguelite
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wars (1828–34) . At an even later period
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Sir R . F . Burton stated that he had met with Sebastianists in remote parts of Brazil (Burton, Camoens, vol. i.p . 363,
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London, 1881), and the cult appears to have survived until the beginning of the loth century, although it ceased to be a
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political force after 1834 . See PORTUGAL,
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History; J . Barbosa Machado, Memorial para . o governe del rey D. ebastieio (4 vols., Lisbon, 1736–1741); Miguel d'Antas,
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Les Faux Don Sibastien (Paris, 1866) ; Sao Mamede, Don Sebastien et Philippe II (Paris, 1884) .

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