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    The Anglo-Portuguese Alliance between England (succeeded by the United Kingdom) and Portugal is the oldest alliance in the world which is still in force. It was signed in 1373.
    This alliance, which goes back to the Middle Ages, has served both countries, despite the common Portuguese complaint that England has profited from her alliance with her weaker ally. It is worth noting, however, that for a long time Portugal was the stronger ally and that both countries have profited from this (now largely unused) alliance. It was very important throughout history, influencing the participation of the United Kingdom in the Iberia Peninsular War (the UK's major land contribution to the Napoleonic Wars), among other things.


        Anglo-Portuguese Alliance
                Middle Ages
                17th to 19th Centuries
                20th Century
            Importance in modern times
            See also

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    Middle Ages

    English aid to the House of Aviz set the stage for the cooperation with England that would be the cornerstone of Portuguese foreign policy for more than 500 years. In May 1386, the Treaty of Windsor sealed the alliance that first started in 1294, and was confirmed at Aljubarrota with a pact of perpetual friendship between the two countries. The next year, John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, son of Edward III, and father of Henry IV, landed in Galicia with an expeditionary force to press his claim to the Castilian throne with Portuguese aid. He failed to win the support of the Castilian nobility and returned to England with a cash compensation from the rival claimant.

    John of Gaunt left behind his daughter, Philippa of Lancaster, to marry João I in order to seal the Anglo-Portuguese alliance. By this marriage, celebrated in 1387, João became the father of a generation of princes called by the poet, Luís de Camões, the "marvelous generation", who led Portugal into its golden age. Philippa brought to the court the Anglo-Norman tradition of an aristocratic education and gave her children good educations. Her personal qualities were the highest, and she reformed the court and imposed rigid standards of moral behavior. Philippa provided royal patronage for English commercial interests that sought to meet the Portuguese desire for cod and cloth in return for wine, cork, salt, and oil shipped through the English warehouses at Porto. Her eldest son, Duarte, authored moral works and became king in 1433; Pedro, who traveled widely and had an interest in history, became regent when Duarte died of the plague in 1438; Fernando, who became a crusader, participated in the attack on Tangiers in 1437; and Henrique — Prince Henry the Navigator — became the master of the Order of Aviz and the instigator and organizer of the early voyages of discovery.

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    17th to 19th Centuries
    Other important episodes in the alliance were, for example, in the War of Spanish Succession when Portugal, together with the Duchy of Savoy, initially sided with the French but after the Battle of Blenheim reunited with its ally; and particularly the Napoleonic Wars, when Portugal, isolated in an Europe wholly dominated by Napoleon, was finally invaded but with English help finally regained total suzerainty and independence; and when the Portuguese royal family took refuge in its then vice-royalty of Brazil, under escort of the English fleet.

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    20th Century
    During the 20th century, the treaty has been invoked several times:

    After German incursions in Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique), Portuguese troops fought on the Western Front during World War I.

    In the Second World War Portugal was neutral but the treaty was invoked by the allies to establish bases on the Azores.

    In 1961 during the invasion of Portuguese possessions of Goa, Daman and Diu, by the Indian Union, Portugal sought the help of Britain to little effect.

    During the 1982 Falklands War the facilities of the Azores were again offered to the British Royal Navy.

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    Importance in modern times
    Today as both countries are members of the European Union and NATO; their relations are coordinated through those institutions rather than by the provisions of the many treaties forming the Anglo-Portuguese Alliance.

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    See also




     
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