Quanto basta a respeito do dia 25 de abril de 1828 by Manuel Cipriano da Costa

(6 User reviews)   969
By Irene Lombardi Posted on Jan 17, 2026
In Category - Oral History
Costa, Manuel Cipriano da, -1834 Costa, Manuel Cipriano da, -1834
Portuguese
Okay, so you think you know about the fight for independence? 'Quanto basta a respeito do dia 25 de abril de 1828' is about one of those weird, almost-forgotten days that history textbooks skip. It's April 25, 1828, in Brazil. The big, official independence war is supposed to be over, but here's the thing: it wasn't for everyone. This book isn't about emperors or grand treaties. It's about the messy, confusing aftermath. Think about it: what happens the day after the revolution? When the flags are raised but the arguments are just getting started? Manuel Cipriano da Costa, who actually lived through this, zooms in on that single, pivotal day. He shows us the tension in the streets, the conflicting orders, and the regular people caught between old loyalties and a new, uncertain country. It's less a war story and more a 'what now?' story. If you like your history with boots on the ground and dust in the air, this is a fascinating, close-up look at a nation being born, one confusing, chaotic day at a time.
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Manuel Cipriano da Costa gives us a front-row seat to a historical moment most of us have never heard of. The year is 1828, and Brazil is a newborn nation, still wobbling on its legs after declaring independence from Portugal. The official fighting has died down, but peace is fragile. 'Quanto basta' focuses laser-sharp on April 25th of that year, a day when that fragile peace threatened to shatter.

The Story

This isn't a sweeping epic. It's a snapshot. Costa, writing as someone who was there, walks us through the streets and the mounting tension. We see military units unsure of who to obey. We hear the rumors flying—talk of loyalist uprisings, of secret plots to reverse independence. The new government is trying to assert control, but the old colonial structures and mindsets haven't just vanished overnight. The book captures that dangerous in-between time. It's about the anxiety of a revolution's morning after, where the real question isn't 'Did we win?' but 'What did we actually win, and how do we keep it?'

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the immediacy. Costa doesn't write like a distant historian; he writes like a witness giving you the urgent news. You feel the paranoia and the hope tangled together. This book pulls the grand idea of 'nation-building' down to human scale. It's in the nervous glance of a soldier, the heated argument in a tavern, the quiet doubt of a merchant wondering if his business will survive. It reminds us that history isn't just made on battlefields with clear winners and losers. It's often made on quiet streets on otherwise ordinary days, by people just trying to figure out what the new rules are.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who think history is about people, not just dates and treaties. If you enjoyed the ground-level perspective of books like 'A People's History' or novels that explore the aftermath of conflict, you'll find this fascinating. It's a short, potent look at a forgotten turning point. You won't get dry analysis here; you'll get the heartbeat of a confusing day that helped shape a country. A real hidden gem for anyone curious about the messy, human truth behind the history books.



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Mary Johnson
1 year ago

The formatting on this digital edition is flawless.

Donald Martinez
1 year ago

Comprehensive and well-researched.

Andrew Thomas
7 months ago

The index links actually work, which is rare!

Elijah Rodriguez
1 year ago

A must-have for anyone studying this subject.

Ava Perez
1 year ago

Wow.

5
5 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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