The Carnation Revolution: The Day Portugal’s Dictatorship Fell with Alex Fernandes

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Alex Fernandes posing
Date and time:
to
Cost: Free Neighbourhood: Vauxhall and Waterloo Category:
  • Readers and Writers Festival

On the night of 24 April 1974, at five minutes to eleven, a Lisbon radio station broadcasts Portugal’s Eurovision entry. By 6.20pm. the next day, Europe’s oldest fascist regime has fallen. Hardly a shot has been fired. As citizens pour into the streets, they offer carnations to the revolutionary soldiers. For the first time in forty-eight years, Portugal is free.

The Carnation Revolution winds through the streets of Lisbon as the revolution unfolds, revealing the myriad acts of ordinary and extraordinary resistance that made 25 April possible. It’s the story of daring escapes from five-storey prisons, soldiers disobeying their officers’ orders and simple acts of courage by thousands of citizens. It’s the story of how a group of young captains felled a globe-spanning empire.

Join Alex to discuss his new book celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Portuguese Revolution.

Location

Address

180 South Lambeth Road
London
SW8 1QP
United Kingdom

location

Contact details

Contact name: Pauline Edole
Contact job title: Library Manager
Contact phone: 020 7926 0710
Enquiries email: southlambethlibrary@lambeth.gov.uk