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* The ''VideoGame/VictoriaAnEmpireUnderTheSun'' series covers the time of his reign as the Emperor of Brazil, and ''Victoria 3'' has him even appear as a character. The game's DLC ''Colossus of the South'' focuses on his reign in detail, giving player the chance to either experience the historical republican coup, preserve the Brazilian monarchy (and get the "Magnanimous" achievement along the way), or [[TakeAThirdOption make Brazil a republic with Pedro as its first president]].

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* The ''VideoGame/VictoriaAnEmpireUnderTheSun'' series covers the time of his reign as the Emperor of Brazil, and ''Victoria 3'' even has him even appear as a character. The game's DLC ''Colossus of the South'' focuses on his reign in detail, giving player the chance to either experience the historical republican coup, preserve the Brazilian monarchy (and get the "Magnanimous" achievement along the way), or [[TakeAThirdOption make Brazil a republic with Pedro as its first president]].
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Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, which had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class (and, consequently, the larger part of the professional military forces which were largely made up of wealthy officers), who began pushing for the deposition of the emperor and the establishment of a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.

to:

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, which had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class (and, consequently, the larger part of the professional military forces which were largely made up of wealthy officers), who began pushing for the deposition of the emperor and the establishment of a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth childbirth[[note]]Her death, when Pedro I was about a year old, was a controversial issue, as her cause of death was never conclusively established.[[/note]] and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.
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%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]
[[caption-width-right:350:Photograph by American photographer Mathew Brady, c. 1876]]



* The ''VideoGame/VictoriaAnEmpireUnderTheSun'' series covers the time of his reign as the Emperor of Brazil, and ''Victoria 3'' has him even appear as a character. The game's DLC ''Colossus of the South'' focuses on his reign in detail, giving player the chance to either experience the historical republican coup, preserve the Brazilian monarchy, or [[TakeAThirdOption make Brazil a republic with Pedro as its first president]].

to:

* The ''VideoGame/VictoriaAnEmpireUnderTheSun'' series covers the time of his reign as the Emperor of Brazil, and ''Victoria 3'' has him even appear as a character. The game's DLC ''Colossus of the South'' focuses on his reign in detail, giving player the chance to either experience the historical republican coup, preserve the Brazilian monarchy, monarchy (and get the "Magnanimous" achievement along the way), or [[TakeAThirdOption make Brazil a republic with Pedro as its first president]].

Added: 430

Changed: 44

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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last [[UsefulNotes/TheEmpireOfBrazil Emperor]] of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troops]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.

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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] Habsburgo]], also nicknamed [[TheMagnificent the Magnanimous]], (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last [[UsefulNotes/TheEmpireOfBrazil Emperor]] of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troops]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.


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* The ''VideoGame/VictoriaAnEmpireUnderTheSun'' series covers the time of his reign as the Emperor of Brazil, and ''Victoria 3'' has him even appear as a character. The game's DLC ''Colossus of the South'' focuses on his reign in detail, giving player the chance to either experience the historical republican coup, preserve the Brazilian monarchy, or [[TakeAThirdOption make Brazil a republic with Pedro as its first president]].
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* In ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'', he is the representative leader of Brazil introduced in ''V''. While he is depicted in his first appearance in his old age, he is depicted much younger in the next game.

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* In ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'', he is the representative leader of Brazil introduced in ''V''. While he is depicted in his first appearance in his old age, he is depicted much younger in the next game.game.
* ''WebAnimation/ExtraCredits'' covers Pedro II's reign in their "Empire Of Brazil" series.
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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troops]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.

to:

[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor [[UsefulNotes/TheEmpireOfBrazil Emperor]] of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troops]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.
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Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Music/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by intellectuals like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, which had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class (and, consequently, the larger part of the professional military forces which were largely made up for wealthy officers), who began pushing for the deposition of the emperor and the establishment of a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.

to:

Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Music/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom (who managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by intellectuals like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, which had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class (and, consequently, the larger part of the professional military forces which were largely made up for of wealthy officers), who began pushing for the deposition of the emperor and the establishment of a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.

to:

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he which had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class (and, consequently, the larger part of the professional military forces which were largely made up for wealthy officers), who began pushing to depose for the deposition of the emperor and establish the establishment of a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.

Added: 1103

Changed: 1991

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Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he lead a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. And so in a very bizarre situation, he ended up [[AbdicateTheThrone abdicating]] in a bloodless coup even though he was still highly regarded by his own people - even the very Republicans who deposed him saw Pedro as role model and tried to emulate him. Pedro would soon die two years after in Paris, and the whole nation mourned when news reached the fledgling Republic. His still living descendants are the House of Orleans-Braganza currently living in France and are still claimants to the throne.

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back (technically there was a referendum in 1993 asking whether the people preferred the monarchy or the republic and more than 80% voted for the latter). Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as regional power. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

to:

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he lead leads a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. It also didn't help that he had no male heir on which to bestow the throne: both of his two sons died young, and while his daughter Isabel was smart, he didn't believe a woman was up for the task of ruling. All of which convinced him early on that his throne wasn't something that ought to be continued.

And so in a very bizarre situation, he ended up [[AbdicateTheThrone abdicating]] in a bloodless coup even though he was still highly regarded by his own people - even the very Republicans who deposed him saw Pedro saw him as a role model and tried to emulate him. Pedro would soon die two years after in Paris, and the whole nation mourned when news reached the fledgling Republic. His still living still-living descendants are the House of Orleans-Braganza currently living in France and are still claimants to the throne.

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being is characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back (technically there was a referendum in 1993 asking whether the people preferred the monarchy or the republic and more than 80% voted for the latter). Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as regional power. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Creator/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by intellectuals like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.

to:

Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Creator/RichardWagner Music/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by intellectuals like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.
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Brazil has a looong way to go before it could dream to be a superpower.


He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back (technically there was a referendum in 1993 asking whether the people preferred the monarchy or the republic and more than 80% voted for the latter). Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

to:

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back (technically there was a referendum in 1993 asking whether the people preferred the monarchy or the republic and more than 80% voted for the latter). Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower.regional power. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he lead a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. And so in a very bizarre situation, he ended up [[AbdicateTheThrone abdicating]] in a bloodless coup even though he was still highly regarded by his own people - even the very Republicans who deposed him saw Pedro as role model and tried to emulate him. Pedro would soon die two years after in Paris, and the whole nation mourned when news reached the fledgling Republic.

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back. Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

to:

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he lead a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. And so in a very bizarre situation, he ended up [[AbdicateTheThrone abdicating]] in a bloodless coup even though he was still highly regarded by his own people - even the very Republicans who deposed him saw Pedro as role model and tried to emulate him. Pedro would soon die two years after in Paris, and the whole nation mourned when news reached the fledgling Republic.

Republic. His still living descendants are the House of Orleans-Braganza currently living in France and are still claimants to the throne.

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back.back (technically there was a referendum in 1993 asking whether the people preferred the monarchy or the republic and more than 80% voted for the latter). Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Creator/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.

to:

Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Creator/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by intellectuals like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.



He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the opinion on him is exceedingly positive: Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

to:

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the general opinion on him is exceedingly positive: he has been repeatedly used as the standard for which leaders were measured, with historians cynically pointing out that the long string of dictators and despots that followed failed to live up to him - even though nobody really argued to restore the monarchy back. Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

Added: 148

Changed: 171

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[[quoteright:350:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/pedro_ii_of_brazil___brady_handy.jpg]]
%%[[caption-width-right:350:some caption text]]



He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today and he was back then, being characterized as man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. He is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

!Pedro II has been seen in the following works

to:

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today and as he was back then, being characterized as a man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. He While following Brazilian leaders were viewed in a more divisive manner either by its contemporaries or historians, the opinion on him is exceedingly positive: Pedro is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

!Pedro II has been seen in the following works
works:
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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troope]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.

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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the troope]]) troops]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.
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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the tropes]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.

to:

[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the tropes]]) troope]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.
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[[OverlyLongName Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Bragança e Habsburgo]] (December 2, 1825 - December 5, 1891) was the second and last Emperor of UsefulNotes/{{Brazil}}. Born the seventh son (and only male to survive infancy) of the previous Emperor Pedro I and his wife Maria Leopoldina of UsefulNotes/{{Austria}}, he inherited the throne at very young age (a whooping 5-years old) when his father abdicated the Brazilian throne to restore peace in UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} (he was the previous king's heir and a SuccessionCrisis was underway). While his father's best friend ruled the country as regent, young Pedro II was left in charge of a country on the brink of disintegration: disputes between political factions and several rebellious movements took place all over the country that threatened to secede whole states from the Empire. In order to restore stability, the Parliament rushed Pedro's coronation when he was still [[AChildShallLeadThem 14-years old]] before he could officially reach manhood. His reign spanned over 50 years and saw Brazil becoming a emerging superpower in the international theater, winning three international conflicts (the most notorious being the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheTripleAlliance of which [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething he personally coordinated the tropes]]) and ushering a time of prosperity for his people, the likes of which their Hispanic neighbors could only dream of.

Pedro was a man of progress, an advocate of abolition, free speech, arts and science, as result of his preparation from an early age to rule. He was personal friends with contemporary artists and inventors such as Creator/RichardWagner and Alexander Graham Bell (whom managed to amaze the monarch with his telephone) and was admired and looked up to by like UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin, Creator/VictorHugo and Creator/FriedrichNietzsche to name a few. Pedro invested in scientific advances, provided scholarship for Brazilian students to study at universities and colleges and founded the Imperial Academy of the Fine Arts. He held the distinction of being one of the three heads of states besides UsefulNotes/PeterTheGreat and UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte [[note]]who incidentally happened to be Pedro's own uncle for marrying one of Maria Leopoldina's sisters[[/note]] to being elected to the French Academy of Sciences.

Pedro's long rule came to an end in 1889 following the abolition of slavery, he had eroded the support of Brazilian wealthy class who began pushing to depose the emperor and establish a Republic to protect their interests. Despite having the public support of the commoners and the recently freed slaves (who equated the monarchy with freedom for their part in the abolition), the emperor did not resist in order to prevent a potential civil war from erupting and in no small part of [[ReluctantRuler growing weary of his role as monarch]], as he lead a very grim and lonely childhood with his mother dying in childbirth and his father leaving him at a very young age and dying a little afterwards. And so in a very bizarre situation, he ended up [[AbdicateTheThrone abdicating]] in a bloodless coup even though he was still highly regarded by his own people - even the very Republicans who deposed him saw Pedro as role model and tried to emulate him. Pedro would soon die two years after in Paris, and the whole nation mourned when news reached the fledgling Republic.

He is widely regarded as TheGoodKing today and he was back then, being characterized as man of admirable integrity, intelligence and a strong sense of duty and loyalty to his people, which were immensely reciprocated. He is specially admired for being ahead of his time and much of his progressive legacy remains to his day and serve as foundation for Brazil's rapidly rising status as superpower. As such he often tops the list of greatest Brazilians who ever lived, if not filling the number one position himself.

!Pedro II has been seen in the following works

* In ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'', he is the representative leader of Brazil introduced in ''V''. While he is depicted in his first appearance in his old age, he is depicted much younger in the next game.

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