Joaquim José da Silva Xavier (; 12 November 1746 – 21 April 1792), known as Tiradentes (), was a military officer and political activist in Colonial Brazil. He is best known as one of the leading figures of the Inconfidência Mineira, an unsuccessful separatist movement against Portuguese colonial rule in the Captaincy of Minas Gerais.

Born into a rural landowning family, Tiradentes fell into hardship following the death of his parents. He performed various jobs during his youth, including as a miner, a merchant, a soldier and a dentist, the last of which gave rise to his nickname. During the 1780s, amid a crisis of Minas Gerais' mining economy and increasing fiscal pressure imposed by the Portuguese Crown, Tiradentes became involved with the dissatisfied intellectual elite of the captaincy. He soon established himself as the principal propagandist of an emancipationist movement that sought the independence of Minas Gerais from Portugal, informed by Enlightenment ideas and inspired in part by the American Revolution. The movement was ultimately betrayed by a co-conspirator, Joaquim Silvério dos Reis, before it could take place, leading to Tiradentes' arrest in 1789. Following proceedings that lasted nearly three years, he was sentenced to death, hanged and quartered on the charge of lèse-majesté.

Tiradentes' execution, initially intended as exemplary punishment, was later reinterpreted as an act of civic martyrdom, especially after the proclamation of the republic. He subsequently became one of the principal political symbols of the Brazilian nation, and his legacy has been invoked by various factions and regimes. The day of his execution was established as a national holiday.

Historical context

The second half of the 18th century in Minas Gerais was marked by the progressive depletion of gold deposits and the consequent contraction of the mining economy, which had sustained the region's prosperity in previous decades.

Faced with declining revenue, the Portuguese Crown intensified mechanisms of fiscal control and collection, most notably the threat of the derrama, a measure that provided for the compulsory collection of overdue taxes in order to ensure fulfillment of the revenue targets of the Royal fifth.

This setting of economic crisis and political tension coincided with the circulation of Enlightenment ideas and the impact of international events, such as the independence of the United States, which provided references for projects of political autonomy among sectors of the colonial elite.

At the same time, the Portuguese colonial administration sought to reaffirm its authority through centralizing practices and the strengthening of administrative and judicial structures, which contributed to the intensification of conflicts between the Crown and local groups.

In this context, the political and intellectual environment emerged that made possible the articulation of the Inconfidência Mineira, a movement in which Tiradentes would play a prominent role as a disseminator of separatist proposals.

Biography

Early life

thumb|left|Ruins of Fazenda do Pombal, in the present-day municipality of [[Ritápolis]]

Tiradentes was born at Fazenda do Pombal, near the settlement of Santa Rita do Rio Abaixo, in territory then belonging to the jurisdiction of the Vila of São José del-Rei, in the Captaincy of Minas Gerais.

He was the son of Domingos da Silva Santos and Antônia da Encarnação Xavier, rural landowners of relative local prestige.

After the death of his mother in 1755 and of his father a few years later, the family faced economic hardship, resulting in the loss of a significant portion of its property.

Without access to systematic formal education, Tiradentes was raised under the guardianship of his uncle and godfather, the surgeon Sebastião Ferreira Leitão, from whom he acquired practical knowledge in health care and various trades.

During his youth, he performed a range of activities, including mining, commerce and practices connected with empirical medicine and dentistry, the occupation that gave rise to the nickname by which he became known.

The available documentation indicates that his family owned enslaved people and resources connected with mineral exploitation, which qualifies the later image of poverty associated with his figure.

Adult life

thumb|[[Statue of Tiradentes, by Francisco de Andrade, located in front of the Palácio Tiradentes in Rio de Janeiro]]

In the 1770s, Tiradentes consolidated a trajectory marked by social mobility and the exercise of multiple activities, including mining, commerce and the provision of services connected with the circulation of goods in the mining regions.

In 1780, he entered the military career by enlisting in the troops of the Captaincy of Minas Gerais. The following year, he was appointed alferes of the Dragoons, a unit responsible for surveillance and patrolling of strategic routes, especially the Caminho Novo, which connected the mining areas to the port of Rio de Janeiro.

His duties included territorial reconnaissance, combating smuggling and repressing armed bands operating in the region, functions that were fundamental to maintaining colonial control over the circulation of gold.

Despite his experience and service, he did not obtain significant advancement in his military career, remaining at the rank of alferes. Historiography indicates that this stagnation was related both to his social origin and to the structural limitations of the promotion system in Colonial Brazil.

Alongside his military career, Tiradentes expanded his circulation among different urban centers, including Vila Rica and Rio de Janeiro, where he came into contact with sectors that expressed dissatisfaction with colonial administration and Portuguese fiscal policy.

From the 1780s onward, he began to express more explicit criticism of Portuguese rule, defending proposals for the political reorganization of the Captaincy of Minas Gerais.

Political involvement

The intensification of economic and political tensions in the Captaincy of Minas Gerais during the 1780s contributed to the formation of networks of sociability among members of the colonial elite dissatisfied with Portuguese administration.

In this context, Tiradentes began to frequent circles that brought together landowners, military officers, clerics and men of letters, among whom Cláudio Manuel da Costa, Tomás António Gonzaga and Inácio José de Alvarenga Peixoto stood out.

Unlike other participants, whose activity tended to occur in more restricted spaces, Tiradentes distinguished himself through his work as a propagandist for ideas of political rupture, spreading proposals for independence in different localities of the captaincy.

His movement through urban areas and commercial routes helped broaden the reach of these ideas, although it also exposed his activities to greater surveillance by the colonial authorities.

Historiography often interprets his role as distinct from that of the other inconfidentes, characterizing him as an agent more directly engaged in the dissemination of the movement, in contrast with sectors of the elite that maintained greater caution in the face of the possibility of a break with the Crown.

This prominence, together with his intermediate social position, was later identified as one of the factors that contributed to his exemplary condemnation at the conclusion of the conspiracy.

Participation in the Inconfidência Mineira

thumb|Oil on canvas by [[Leopoldino de Faria (1836-1911) depicting Tiradentes before the commutation of the sentences of the other inconfidentes]]

Context and causes

The Inconfidência Mineira took shape in a context of structural crisis in the gold economy of the Captaincy of Minas Gerais, characterized by declining production and the consequent decrease in the revenues of the Portuguese Crown.

In this setting, the colonial administration intensified its mechanisms of tax collection, most notably the threat of the derrama, which provided for the compulsory collection of overdue taxes related to the Royal fifth.

At the same time, sectors of the local elite expressed growing dissatisfaction with Portuguese administrative policy, marked by the centralization of power and the exclusion of local groups from decision-making bodies.

This atmosphere of tension was influenced by the circulation of Enlightenment ideas and by external references, especially the independence of the United States, which offered models for a break with metropolitan rule.

In this context, a political and intellectual environment favorable to the articulation of the Inconfidência Mineira was formed, a movement in which Tiradentes played a prominent role as a disseminator of separatist proposals.

Organization and proposals

thumb|Tiradentes before the Executioner, by Rafael Falco (1951)

The inconfidente movement was structured as a restricted conspiracy, based on networks of sociability among members of the Minas Gerais elite and their interlocutors.

Among its participants were figures such as Cláudio Manuel da Costa, Tomás António Gonzaga, Inácio José de Alvarenga Peixoto and , as well as Tiradentes.

The group's proposals included the separation of the Captaincy of Minas Gerais from Portuguese rule, the creation of a republic and the transfer of the capital to São João del-Rei or Vila Rica.

Other measures discussed involved the creation of educational institutions, the encouragement of manufacturing and fiscal reorganization, although there was no consensus among the conspirators on issues such as the abolition of slavery.

Within this set of proposals, Tiradentes stood out for his more active role in spreading the movement's ideas, seeking to broaden its base of support beyond the restricted circles of the elite.

Discovery and repression

The conspiracy was denounced in 1789 by Joaquim Silvério dos Reis, who, together with other informers, sought to obtain benefits from the Portuguese Crown, including the forgiveness of debts.

Following the denunciation, a judicial investigation, known as a devassa, was opened to investigate those involved, conducted by the colonial authorities in Rio de Janeiro.

Tiradentes was arrested in May 1789 in the city of Rio de Janeiro, where he was traveling.

The repression of the movement revealed the fragility of the conspiratorial organization, marked by the absence of broad popular support and by its dependence on a restricted circle of participants.

The investigation continued for several years, culminating in the condemnation of those involved and the definitive dismantling of the movement.

Trial, sentence and execution

Trial

thumb|left|upright|Sentence issued against the defendants of the Inconfidência Mineira, 1792. [[National Archives of Brazil|National Archives]]

After the denunciation of the conspiracy in 1789, a judicial proceeding known as a devassa was opened and conducted by the colonial authorities in Rio de Janeiro.

The proceedings form part of the documentary corpus known as the Autos da Devassa da Inconfidência Mineira, one of the main primary sources for the study of the conspiracy. The first printed edition was published by the Biblioteca Nacional between 1936 and 1938 in seven volumes, under federal authorization. A later edition, published from 1976 to 1983 by the Chamber of Deputies and the Minas Gerais official press, further expanded access to the records.

The accused were charged with the crime of lèse-majesté, as defined in the Philippine Ordinances, which classified as treason any attempt at rebellion against the authority of the sovereign.

The proceedings lasted about three years, during which the defendants remained imprisoned and were subjected to interrogations and the collection of documentary evidence.

In 1792, the sentence was issued: several of those involved were initially condemned to death, but had their sentences commuted to exile by decision of Maria I of Portugal.

thumb|Prison of Tiradentes

Tiradentes was the only defendant sentenced to capital punishment, an interpretation frequently associated in historiography with his lower social position and with his prominence in spreading the movement's ideas.

Execution

thumb|upright|Martyrdom of Tiradentes, oil on canvas by [[Francisco Aurélio de Figueiredo e Melo]]

thumb|upright|Tiradentes Quartered, by [[Pedro Américo (1893)]]

Tiradentes was executed by hanging on 21 April 1792 in the city of Rio de Janeiro, according to the determination of the judicial sentence.

After the execution, his body was quartered, a practice provided for in penalties applied to crimes of lèse-majesté, and its parts were displayed at different points in Minas Gerais territory, along the Caminho Novo.

His head was sent to Vila Rica, where it was displayed in a public place as an example of punitive power.

In addition, his property was confiscated, his house was ordered to be razed and salted, and a marker was to be placed on the site to record the reason for the punishment, while his memory and descendants were declared infamous under the legal practices of the Ancien Régime.

The execution of Tiradentes formed part of a broader set of repressive strategies intended to reaffirm the authority of the Portuguese Crown and discourage new attempts at rebellion in the State of Brazil.

Construction of memory

19th century

After the Independence of Brazil, the figure of Tiradentes remained relatively marginal in the official political memory of the Empire.

The maintenance of the monarchy under the House of Braganza, directly linked to the Portuguese dynasty against which the conspiracy had been directed, contributed to the absence of public celebration of his memory.

During this period, the Inconfidência Mineira was frequently interpreted as an episode of treason against the Crown, in accordance with the legal terminology of the time, which defined inconfidência as a breach of fidelity to the sovereign.

Republic and positivism

After the proclamation of the republic in 1889, a profound re-signification of the figure of Tiradentes took place, and he came to be reinterpreted as a martyr of liberty and a precursor of the republican nation.

Intellectuals and politicians connected with positivism played a central role in this process, promoting the construction of a civic memory based on national heroes capable of symbolizing values such as sacrifice, virtue and patriotism.

No contemporary portrait of Tiradentes is known, and later visual representations were produced after his death. This absence of a fixed likeness allowed artists and republican memory-makers to construct a iconography that often emphasized martyrdom, long hair and a beard, features that visually associated him with Jesus Christ and a clear strategy of symbolic sacralization of his death.

The institutionalization of this memory included the creation of civic ceremonies, the naming of public spaces and the consecration of the date of his execution as a national holiday.

20th century and political uses

Throughout the 20th century, the image of Tiradentes was appropriated by different political regimes, which mobilized it as an instrument of symbolic legitimation.

During the Estado Novo, his figure was associated with the idea of national unity and civic discipline, while during the period of the military regime it was used as a symbol of order and patriotism.

At the same time, historiography began to critically reassess the Inconfidência Mineira movement and the role of Tiradentes, emphasizing the social limitations of the movement and questioning excessively heroic interpretations.

In the cultural field, his image remained widely disseminated in monuments, literary works and artistic representations, consolidating itself as one of the principal symbols of Brazilian historical memory, especially after its re-signification during the republican period.

Birthplace and historiography

The birthplace of Tiradentes has been the subject of debate in historiography and regional memory. Although he was born at Fazenda do Pombal, in the present-day municipality of Ritápolis, the locality was, in the 18th century, under the jurisdiction of the Vila of São José del-Rei, not the Vila of São João del-Rei.

In the context of the State of Brazil, the notion of birthplace was linked to political-administrative units, such as vilas, which exercised legal, fiscal and administrative functions in the territory.

The persistence of the controversy derives, to a large extent, from the projection of contemporary categories, such as municipality, onto a distinct historical reality, constituting a case of interpretive anachronism.

In addition, the dispute among localities such as Ritápolis, São João del-Rei and Tiradentes may be understood as part of processes of construction and appropriation of historical memory at the local level.

In this sense, the figure of Tiradentes acts as an element of symbolic identification, mobilized by different communities as a form of historical and cultural affirmation, in a process characteristic of the social construction of memory.

Finally, as emphasized by Reinhart Koselleck, historical concepts are temporally situated and should be understood from within their own horizons of experience. The application of contemporary categories to the 18th century therefore tends to obscure the specific forms of territorial and political organization of the period.

Thus, although the question of birthplace has relevance in the field of memory and regional identity, it does not constitute a substantive historiographical problem when analyzed in light of the administrative structures of the colonial period and the historicity of the concepts used to interpret it.

Descendants

The question of Tiradentes' descendants is a matter of historiographical uncertainty, owing to the scarcity of conclusive documentation about his personal life. There are no records that he formally married, although there are documentary indications of relationships with women mentioned in the records of the devassa, including Antônia Maria do Espírito Santo.

Some genealogical traditions attributed descendants to Tiradentes through children said to have been born outside marriage. These claims, however, have been treated cautiously by historians because the documentary chain is fragmentary and, in some cases, contradicted by parish or judicial records. A study published by the Instituto Histórico de Petrópolis, for example, rejected the claim that Pedro de Almeida Beltrão Júnior, Maria Custódia dos Santos and Zoé Cândida dos Santos were great-grandchildren of Tiradentes, arguing that the baptismal record of João de Almeida Beltrão identified another father.

The same study states that Tiradentes had a daughter, Joaquina, baptized in Vila Rica in 1786, but notes that her later life is unknown and that no secure line of descent from her has been established. Because of these uncertainties, modern historiography generally treats the question of descent as secondary to Tiradentes' documented role in the Inconfidência Mineira.

Despite the lack of conclusive historical proof, the Brazilian state has at times legally recognized people as descendants of Tiradentes for the purpose of granting special pensions. During the military dictatorship, Decree-Law No. 952 of 1969 granted pensions to Pedro de Almeida Beltrão Júnior, Maria Custódia dos Santos and Zoé Cândida dos Santos, describing them as the last three great-grandchildren of Tiradentes. Later laws granted special pensions to other persons described as descendants, including Josa Pedro Tiradentes in 1985 and Lúcia de Oliveira Menezes in 1996.

The pension granted to Lúcia de Oliveira Menezes later became the subject of litigation. In 2007, the Supreme Federal Court maintained her right to receive the benefit after a challenge by the National Social Security Institute, which had questioned the accumulation of the special pension with another pension she received. The court report described the benefit created by Law No. 9,255 of 1996 as honorific and reparatory in nature, connected to the memory of Tiradentes.

Contemporary claims of descent, therefore, belong partly to the history of family memory and partly to the legal and symbolic uses of Tiradentes' image. The existence of pension laws and court cases shows official recognition of particular claimants, but does not remove the historiographical uncertainty surrounding a verifiable direct lineage from Tiradentes.

Cultural impact

Civic memory and political uses

upright|thumb|[[Statue representing the execution of Tiradentes in Praça Tiradentes, Belo Horizonte]]

upright|thumb|Bust of Tiradentes in the [[Tancredo Neves Pantheon of the Fatherland and Freedom, in Brasília]]

thumb|left|150px|Tiradentes depicted on a [[Brazilian real|5 centavos coin]]

thumb|5000 Cruzeiros banknote issued between 1942 to 1967

thumb| Obverse of the Brazilian 5000 Cruzeiros coin commemorating the 200th anniversary of the Tiradente's death (1992).

thumb|Stamp of Brazil, issued in 1965

The consolidation of Tiradentes as a national symbol was directly associated with the construction of republican civic memory in Brazil. From the late 19th century onward, his image was incorporated into official ceremonies, public monuments, place names and state institutions, forming a process of monumentalization of historical memory.

One of the earliest and most visible forms of this memorialization was the renaming of places associated with his life and with the memory of the Inconfidência Mineira. The former Vila de São José del-Rei, in Minas Gerais, received the name Tiradentes by state decree on 6 December 1889, shortly after the proclamation of the republic; the change was later ratified by state law in 1891. In Ouro Preto, the former Vila Rica, the central square where his head was displayed after the execution became Praça Tiradentes, later marked by a monument to him and by the presence of the Museu da Inconfidência.

The day 21 April was established as a national holiday, and Tiradentes was declared civic patron of the Brazilian nation by Law No. 4,897 of 1965. His name was later inscribed in the Book of Heroes of the Fatherland by Law No. 7,919 of 1989, together with that of Deodoro da Fonseca. According to the Brazilian Senate, Tiradentes was the first name entered in the book, which is kept in the Tancredo Neves Pantheon of the Fatherland and Freedom in Brasília.

The Tancredo Neves Pantheon of the Fatherland and Freedom, inaugurated in Brasília in 1986, also forms part of his official memorialization. The Government of the Federal District describes the Pantheon as a civic monument dedicated to national heroes associated with liberty and democracy, and states that it also consecrates the memory of Tiradentes as civic patron of the Brazilian nation.

Tiradentes was also memorialized in the architecture of the Brazilian state. The Palácio Tiradentes in Rio de Janeiro, inaugurated in 1926 as the seat of the Chamber of Deputies, was built on the site of the former Cadeia Velha, where Tiradentes had been imprisoned before his execution. The Chamber of Deputies describes the building as a symbol of the republic and notes that it was named after Tiradentes because of this association with the Inconfidência Mineira and the old prison site.

His name and image also became attached to military and police institutions. Tiradentes is commemorated as patron of the military police forces of Brazil, a connection reinforced by the use of 21 April in police ceremonies and institutional commemorations. The association linked his memory to ideals of order, civic duty and state authority, particularly in the 20th century.

His image also circulated through Brazilian monetary iconography. Tiradentes appeared on Brazilian currency in the 20th century and later on the 5-centavo coin of the Brazilian real, helping to embed his image in everyday civic culture.

Artistic representations

The figure of Tiradentes was widely represented in the visual arts, especially from the republican period onward, when an iconography marked by his symbolic association with martyrdom was consolidated. Because no contemporary portrait or precise physical description of Tiradentes is known, later representations were constructed from political, religious and artistic conventions rather than from direct likeness.

In the late 19th century, visual representations frequently emphasized Tiradentes as a sacrificial martyr. He was often shown with long hair, a beard, white clothing and religious attributes, especially the crucifix, in a visual language that associated his death with the Passion of Jesus Christ.

Paintings such as Martyrdom of Tiradentes, attributed to Francisco Aurélio de Figueiredo e Melo, and Tiradentes Quartered, by Pedro Américo, contributed to the fixing of his image as a sacrificial hero. The former depicts the hanging of Tiradentes with the condemned man at the center of the scaffold, long-haired and bearded, wearing a long white tunic and accompanied by religious imagery.

Pedro Américo's Tiradentes Quartered, painted in 1893 and originally titled Tiradentes Supliciado, became one of the most controversial images of Tiradentes. Rather than presenting him as a triumphant civic hero, the painting depicts his dismembered body after execution, with his head separated from the trunk and placed near a crucifix. This imagery intensified the association between Tiradentes and martyrdom, while also complicating the heroic visual program promoted by the early republic.

A different iconographic model emerged in the 20th century. The first widely noted representation of Tiradentes in the uniform of an ensign was produced in 1940 by José Wasth Rodrigues, presenting him less as a suffering religious martyr and more as a military and civic figure. This image, later widely reproduced, helped establish a version of Tiradentes compatible with official civic commemoration and state symbolism.

In literature, the work Romanceiro da Inconfidência, by Cecília Meireles, stands out for poetically reinterpreting the episode of the Inconfidência Mineira and reinforcing its symbolic dimension in Brazilian culture.

Audiovisual

The life of Tiradentes and the Inconfidência Mineira have been represented in various film and television productions throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. These works have ranged from historical drama and civic biography to more experimental or fictionalized uses of the Tiradentes myth.

Film

  • 1948 - Inconfidência Mineira, directed by Carmen Santos
  • 1966 - Cristo de Lama, directed by Wilson Silva
  • 1972 - Os Inconfidentes, directed by Joaquim Pedro de Andrade
  • 1976 - O Mártir da Independência Tiradentes, directed by Geraldo Vietri
  • 1999 - Tiradentes, directed by Oswaldo Caldeira
  • 2017 - Joaquim, directed by Marcelo Gomes

Television

  • 1969 - Dez Vidas, by Ivani Ribeiro
  • 1976 - Saramandaia, by Dias Gomes, which made fictional use of Tiradentes within a broader narrative of magical realism
  • 1984 - Tiradentes, Nosso Herói, a children's musical about the Inconfidência Mineira, broadcast by TV Globo
  • 2016 - Liberdade, Liberdade, by Mário Teixeira and Márcia Prates, in which Thiago Lacerda portrayed Tiradentes

The presence of Tiradentes in popular culture appears in different forms, including civic celebrations, the naming of public spaces and carnival representations.

In 1949, the samba school Império Serrano honored Tiradentes with the theme Exaltação a Tiradentes, showing his incorporation into the urban popular imagination.

In the 2008 carnival, the school Unidos do Viradouro presented an aesthetic reinterpretation of the execution of Tiradentes, demonstrating the persistence of his figure as a symbolic element in contemporary Brazilian culture.

His image also circulated through Brazilian monetary iconography. Tiradentes appeared on the 5,000-cruzeiro banknote issued during the 1960s and, from 1998 onward, on the 5-centavo coin of the Brazilian real, helping to embed his image in everyday civic culture.

Sources

Primary sources

Historical documentation

Legislation

Historical documentation

Legislation

Bibliography

Further reading

Rerefences

  • Inconfidência Mineira at Arquivo Nacional
  • A Inconfidencia Mineira: Autos de devassa at the Brazilian Ministry of Justice and Public Security Digital Repository
  • Autos de Devassa da Inconfidência Mineira at the Legislative Assembly of Minas Gerais Digital Library
  • Museu da Inconfidência, at Museu da Inconfidência
  • Historia da conjuração mineira by Joaquim Norberto de Souza e Silva, 1873, at the Biblioteca Brasiliana Guita e José Mindlin, University of São Paulo
  • Law No. 4,897 of 9 December 1965, declaring Tiradentes civic patron of the Brazilian nation
  • Law No. 7,705 of 21 December 1988, concerning the Book of Heroes of the Fatherland
  • Pantheon of the Fatherland and Freedom at the Government of the Federal District
  • Tiradentes on Brazilian currency at the Central Bank of Brazil