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But while her grand schemes failed, her influence on Brazil was profound. She was not a beloved queen; the people of Rio whispered that she was a witch, a shrew, a madwoman. But she was also a force of nature. She insisted on Brazilian products being used in the palace, from sugar to fine woods. She was one of the first to truly appreciate the tropical land, riding horses through the countryside with a boldness that scandalized the delicate courtiers. In her own furious, ambitious way, she helped break the rigid mold of European court life, forcing it to adapt to a raw, new world.
Dom João, a man who preferred chamber music and roast chicken to battles and politics, was horrified. His wife was not a princess; she was a threat. His ministers warned him that Carlota’s ambitions would drag Portugal into a disastrous war with its Spanish neighbors. Her schemes were alternately brilliant and delusional, but they were always relentless.
Her greatest failure came with the so-called “Carlota War” – her failed attempts to seize control of Montevideo and Buenos Aires. Her plans were bold, but her execution was chaotic. Her emissaries were arrested, her letters intercepted. The fierce, independent leaders of the Spanish colonies had no interest in swapping one distant monarch for another, especially one as notoriously difficult as Carlota. Her empire was a fantasy, a castle built of parchment and spite. Carlota Joaquina- Princesa do Brazil
“I am the only legitimate representative of my father, the King of Spain!” she would declare, her voice sharp enough to cut glass. She dreamed of leading an army across the Rio de la Plata, seizing control of the Spanish territories, and creating a vast, new Spanish-Portuguese empire under her rule. She even drew up plans for her own flag.
At ten years old, she was married to Dom João, the second son of the Portuguese queen Maria I. The marriage was a disaster. João was awkward, devoutly pious, and rumored to be both physically and socially timid. Carlota was willful, intelligent, and possessed of a fierce, almost volcanic temper. She found her husband repulsive; he found her terrifying. They did their dynastic duty—producing nine children—but lived largely separate lives, united only by a shared, simmering resentment. But while her grand schemes failed, her influence
Carlota Joaquina was not a good woman. She was not a good queen. She was not a good wife or mother. But she was unforgettable. In the story of Brazil’s birth, she is the villain you can’t look away from—the fiery, frustrated, brilliant Spanish princess who dreamed of an empire of her own and found only a tropical cage, which she refused, to her very last breath, to accept quietly.
Her court at the Botafogo Beach estate became a hotbed of conspirators, adventurers, and exiled Spanish nobles. She held her own audiences, appointed her own guards, and openly mocked her husband’s incompetence. When he tried to placate her, she laughed in his face. When he tried to restrain her, she threatened to have him excommunicated. Theirs was a marriage of cold war, played out in the gilded salons of Rio. She insisted on Brazilian products being used in
She arrived in Rio de Janeiro like a storm. While the Portuguese court was still unpacking their finery and trying to recreate the grim formality of Lisbon’s Queluz Palace, Carlota was already plotting. She saw herself not as a Portuguese princess, but as the rightful Queen of Spain, whose throne had been usurped by Napoleon. From across the Atlantic, she began sending letters, secret emissaries, and frantic instructions to the Spanish resistance in Buenos Aires and Caracas. She demanded that Spanish colonies in the Americas swear allegiance to her , not to the puppet king Joseph Bonaparte.