D. Luís inherited the crown in November 1861, succeeding his brother Pedro V as he left no descendants, and was acclaimed king on 22 December of the same year. On 27 September of the following year, he married
Maria Pia of Savoy, daughter of King
Victor Emanuel II of Italy, by proxy.
Renouncing Spanish throne After the
Glorious Revolution deposed
Isabel II of Spain in September 1868, the new
Cortes began the task of searching for a suitable liberal-leaning candidate from a new dynasty to replace her. In 1869, Luís I made it public that he did not want to be
monarch of Spain and made a point of making that clear both to the Council of Ministers, chaired by the
Duke of Loulé, and to the Portuguese people. Two days after his patriotic letter appeared in the Government's gazette, it was published in the Diário de Notícias, thus serving the Royal House to deny the rumour that there would be an abdication: "I was born Portuguese, Portuguese I want to die," proclaimed Luís on the front page of the newspaper on 28 September 1869. If Luís accepted the Spanish crown, he would have to abdicate in Portugal to
Carlos, his son of only 6 years, with
Ferdinand II as regent, opening up the possibility of an
Iberian Union in the medium term. After Luís refused, the Spanish throne was handed over to his brother-in-law,
Amadeu of Savoy.
Government instability During his reign, and as a result of the creation of the general consumption tax, which was poorly received by public opinion, a riot called
Janeirinha broke out (at the end of 1867). There was also a military revolt on 19 May 1870, promoted by Marshal
Duke of Saldanha, who wanted the government to resign. The monarch responded to the 19 May revolt on 29 August by dismissing Saldanha's ministry and calling
Sá da Bandeira to power. In September 1871,
Fontes Pereira de Melo came to power and organised a regenerative cabinet, which remained in power until 1877. This was followed by the
Duke of Ávila, who couldn't hold on for long because he lacked a majority. Thus, after the parliamentary conflict that broke out in 1878, Fontes was called back to form a cabinet. As a result, the progressives accused the king of scandalously patronising the regenerators. This episode encouraged the development of republicanism. In 1879, King Luís called on the progressives to form a government. During his reign,
Delagoa Bay was confirmed as a Portuguese possession in 1875, whilst
Belgian activities in the
Congo and the
1890 British Ultimatum prevented the Portuguese from colonizing modern-day
Zambia and
Zimbabwe in order to establish a link between
Portuguese Angola and
Portuguese Mozambique at the peak of the
Scramble for Africa. On the same day, the
Franco-Prussian War ended. ==Personal interests==