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Articles
Expansion of Slave Trade
Philip V Founds Royal Library
China Consolidates Control
    over Tibet

Great Lisbon Earthquake
Methodist Church in
    Colonial America

Spanish-Algerine War
Canada's Constitutional Act
Smallpox Vaccination
Battle of Lexington & Concord

Other Elements
Index
Category List
Geographical List
Table of Contents



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Great Events from History: The 18th Century

Editor: Edited by John Powell,
   Oklahoma Baptist University
ISBN: 978-1-58765-279-0
List Price: $175

May 2006 · 2 volumes · 1,144 pages · 8"x10"

Includes Free Online Access Through 12/31/2011

Great Events from History: The 18th Century
Great Lisbon Earthquake

The massive destruction wrought by the Great Lisbon Earthquake resulted in the systematic rebuilding and modernization of the city, making it the most modern and architecturally advanced capital in Europe. The earthquake also occasioned a critical reexamination throughout Enlightenment Europe of the role of reason in nature and human affairs.

Locale: Lisbon, Portugal
Categories: Natural disasters

Key Figures
Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo (1699-1782), Joseph I's prime minister,
     1755-1777, and later the marqês de Pombal, 1769-1782
Manuel de Maia (1672-1768), head of the corps of military engineers who
     organized the reconstruction of Lisbon
Joseph I (1714-1777), king of Portugal, r. 1750-1777

Summary of Event
On November 1, 1755, one of the most devastating earthquakes in modern history struck Lisbon, Portugal. Scientific measurement of earthquake magnitudes did not yet exist; however, based on historical evidence of the level of destruction the earthquake engendered, its magnitude was most likely between 8.5 and 9.0 on the modern Richter scale. The population of the kingdom of Portugal was then almost 3 million, and about 10 percent of the population resided in Lisbon.

Located on the north bank of the Tagus River, the city lay where the river, flowing from the northeast, bent gradually to the west and entered the Atlantic Ocean. Shaped like an amphitheater, Lisbon was flat in its central area, which comprised the port district, the commercial district, and the seat of the royal government. Rising and arching around this center were low hills containing tens of thousands of houses and shops and many dozens of resplendent churches, monasteries, and convents. A magnet of global trade, especially because of its Brazilian gold, Lisbon housed a cosmopolitan population and was widely known for its wealth and opulence. Catholic clergy and religious orders composed an exceptionally large proportion of its inhabitants.

The earthquake began several hours after dawn on the Catholic holy day of All Saints. For about ten minutes during midmorning, the earth shook, rolled, and collapsed several times underneath the city. The epicenter of the earthquake was located many miles out to sea, and damage from shaking and tsunamis extended throughout southern Portugal and Spain and across Gibraltar into Morocco. The quake leveled numerous major buildings in the port area. The royal palace was destroyed, although the king was fortunately not in residence. Because of the holy day, churches were filled with morning worshipers, who were crushed under the weight of collapsing walls and roofs. Frequent aftershocks caused further damage.

Subsequent to the shocks, fires sprang up, and a wind from the northeast helped to blow the various blazes together into a general conflagration. Lasting for almost a week, the flames destroyed the rich contents of churches and palaces, consuming paintings, manuscripts, books, and tapestries. In a final assault, a sequence of tidal waves struck, some towering over twenty feet. Thus, within a few morning hours, quake, fire, and flood had destroyed one of the major ports of Europe.

In the hysteria of the immediate aftermath, the death toll was estimated as being as high as fifty thousand. Modern estimates now calculate that the number of fatalities was at most fifteen thousand. Not only death but also fear, hunger, and disease followed the destruction. Thousands fled the city, blocking roads and jamming passages. Prisoners escaped from jails, assaulting the living and the dead. Food could not enter the city, and countless of the injured languished without care.

Voltaire on the Lisbon Earthquake


Voltaire responded to the earthquake in Lisbon with disgust, taking it as a sign that the natural laws ruling the universe-a central trope of Enlightenment thought-were neither kind nor just. The following lines are taken from a poem he wrote in the aftermath of the disaster.

Oh, unhappy mortals! Oh deplorable Earth!
O, of all mortals, you appalling assembly!
Eternal debate over useless sorrows!
Mistaken philosophers who shout "All is well,"
Run! contemplate these horrible ruins,
This debris, these shreds, these unfortunate ashes,
These women, these children piled one on the other
Under broken marbles and scattered limbs;
One hundred thousand unfortunates that the earth devours
Who, bloody, torn, and still throbbing,
Buried under their roofs, end--unaided
and in horrible torment--their lamentable days!
To the half-formed cries of their expiring voices,
To the horrific spectacle of their smoking ashes,
Will you say, "It's the effect of eternal laws
Created by a free and good God to necessitate choice"?
Will you say, seeing this pile of victims:
"God is revenged, their death is the price of their crimes"?
What crime, what fault did these children lying
Crushed and bloody in their mothers' bosoms commit?
Lisbon, which is no more, did it contain more vices
Than London or Paris, plunged in delights?
Lisbon is in ruins, and in Paris they dance.

Source: From Voltaire's "Poème sur le désastre de Lisbonne: Ou, Examen de cet axiome, `tout est bien,'" 1756. http://un2sg4.unige.ch/athena/voltaire/volt_lis.html. Accessed August 1, 2005. Translated by Andy Perry.


Rebuilding Lisbon became the responsibility of Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, the principal minister of King Joseph I and the future marquês de Pombal. Energetically taking control of recovery efforts, the minister gave his immediate attention to public health. Bodies not burned in fires were collected on boats and sunk in the Tagus River. The army put out fires, cleared streets and passages, immediately executed thieves, and mounted field tents for shelter and feeding. Prices for food and building materials were fixed.

In planning the city's reconstruction, Carvalho e Melo paid particular attention to improving its layout. Lisbon's old, twisting, narrow streets were eliminated, especially in the flat central part of the city, which was redesigned to have wide, straight streets that crossed at right angles in a grid pattern. Near the harbor area, a spacious plaza was built. Carvalho e Melo supervised a group of skilled military engineers, headed by the veteran officer Manuel de Maia, who organized the planning and rebuilding.

To expedite construction, buildings were prefabricated, and the sizes of doors, windows, and walls were standardized. To protect against future earthquakes, building frames were made of wood that could sway under pressure without breaking. The style of these new structures, a kind of simplified or plain Baroque, came to be known as Pombaline.

Significance
As a result of the earthquake, Lisbon came to be among the best-planned and best-constructed cities in eighteenth century Europe. The modernized port imported a high volume of manufactured goods, most of them from Great Britain, which had already begun to industrialize. Much of the wealth that Portugal received in the form of Brazilian gold was therefore funneled from Lisbon's docks straight into Britain's coffers, helping to capitalize the earliest stages of the Industrial Revolution.

The consequences of the earthquake, however, were not all physical or concrete: The abstract arenas of theology and philosophy were affected as well. In fact, it was in precisely these areas that the quake had its most resonant social effects. No sooner had the quake struck than the numerous clergy of Lisbon began declaring it the wrath of God striking against a sinful populace. This preaching roused many into paroxysms of fear, and such hysteria made it extremely difficult to deal with the crisis in an organized, rational manner. The civil authorities begged the clergy not to preach such fear, but their admonitions were only somewhat successful.

News of the extraordinary disaster rolled through Europe in a matter of weeks, its horrors growing with the chain of narrative. Western Europe as a whole was in the midst of an intellectual period known as the Enlightenment, the Age of Reason. Carvalho e Melo, with his rational, utilitarian views of government, was representative of this movement. In the face of religious hysteria, reasonable thinkers of the Enlightenment argued that the Lisbon earthquake needed to be studied not as a supernatural event but as a natural one. The Lisbon earthquake thus prompted a great debate between the emerging rational forces of the modern, scientific age and the declining religious emotions of the medieval era.

A further philosophical debate also occurred. Many of those who believed in a reasoned and organized world felt also that everything that occurred in it did so for the best. Thus, they argued that while the earthquake in Lisbon was a horrible disaster, it resulted in a rebuilt and modernized city. Others replied that one could not be so sanguine and optimistic about the world. Among the leading voices of this contrary point of view was the French philosopher and poet Voltaire. In a long poem written immediately after the earthquake and in a later famous novel, Candide: Ou, L'Optimisme (1759; Candide: Or, All for the Best, 1759; also as Candide: Or, The Optimist, 1762; also as Candide: Or, Optimism, 1947), he argued that the Lisbon tragedy proved the existence of irrational evil in the world.

Voltaire maintained that it was naive and self-serving to say that evil was always balanced by good. There were people everywhere who suffered for no reason and who would never personally benefit from their suffering. He argued that those who believed that everything that happened was for the best were those who wanted to keep things as they were, who wanted acceptance of the status quo. Such an attitude ignored those who suffered under present conditions, and it failed to respond effectively by alleviating their suffering. If ignored over a long period, such suffering could prove unbearable, rendering the sufferers violent. In relation to these arguments, it should be noted that less than half a century after the Lisbon earthquake, the suffering and outrage of the French masses burst forth against Old Regime in the French Revolution.

The Lisbon earthquake, therefore, resounded in Europe not only as a physical event but also as a psychological and cultural one. Its force shook not only the earth but also people's minds, accelerating the already nascent process of old traditions and ideas being replaced with new ones.

Edward A. Riedinger

Further Reading
Brooks, Charles B. Disaster at Lisbon: The Great Earthquake of 1755. Long Beach, Calif.: Shangton Longley Press, 1994. Reassessment of Lisbon earthquake based on modern scientific findings.

Davison, Charles. Great Earthquakes: With 122 Illustrations. London: Thomas Murby, 1936. Includes vivid black and white illustrations of the Lisbon earthquake and its aftermath.

Dynes, Russell Rowe. The Lisbon Earthquake in 1755: Contested Meanings of the First Modern Disaster. Newark, Del.: Disaster Research Center, University of Delaware, 1997. Analyses the Lisbon earthquake in terms of how relief was organized, comparing such relief to modern strategies and conditions.

Kendrick, T. D. The Lisbon Earthquake. London: Methuen, 1956. Classic account, concisely describing the physical nature and social consequences of the quake.

Laidlar, John, comp. Lisbon. Oxford, England: ABC-Clio Press, 1997. Provides brief summaries of publications on Lisbon, with extensive entries for the earthquake of 1755, as well as others.

Maxwell, Kenneth. Pombal: Paradox of the Enlightenment. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1995. Study by a leading scholar of Portugal places Pombal and policies regarding the Lisbon earthquake within the context of the minister's principals and objectives for government and society.

Ockman, Joan. Out of Ground Zero: Case Studies in Urban Reinvention. New York: Prestel, 2002. First chapter deals with the Lisbon earthquake in a book detailing architectural and engineering strategies of recovery for urban disasters worldwide over the past three centuries.

See Also
1701: Oman Captures Zanzibar; 1750: Treaty of Madrid; 1759: Voltaire Satirizes Society in Candide; 1769: Pombal Reforms the Inquisition.

Related articles in Great Lives from History: The Eighteenth Century, 1701-1800: Marquês de Pombal; Voltaire.


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