Tratado de Lisboa (1668): Diferenzas entre revisións
Contido eliminado Contido engadido
Sen resumo de edición |
Sen resumo de edición |
||
Liña 11:
*Acordos sobre o intercambio de prisioneiros e eventual restablecemento das relacións comerciais alcanzadas<ref>Economy and Society in Baroque Portugal, 1668–1703 by Carl A. Hanson</ref>
*Cesión da cidade aricana de [[Ceuta]] a
==Consecuencias==
O Tratado de Lisboa tivo vantaxes para ambos países. España rematou cunha guerra
After 1668, Portugal, determined to differentiate itself from Spain, turned to Western Europe, particularly France and England, for new ideas and skills. This was part of a gradual "de-Iberianization", as Portugal consolidated its cultural and political independence from Spain. Portuguese nationalism, aroused by success on the battlefield, produced hostile reactions to Spain and to Spanish things and persons. By this time, Portuguese society was composed of two basic elements: those who participated in the gradual Europeanization process, the “political nation,” and those who remained largely unchanged, the majority of the people, who remained apolitical and passive.<ref>Republican Portugal: A Political History, 1910–1926 by Douglas L. Wheeler</ref>
|