Vicente Nicolau de Mesquita
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Vicente Nicolau de Mesquita (July 9, 1818 in São Lourenço,
Portuguese Macau Portuguese Macau (officially the Province of Macau until 1976, and then the Autonomous Region of Macau from 1976 to 1999) was a Portuguese colony that existed from the first official Portuguese settlement in 1557 to the end of colonial ru ...
– March 20, 1880 in São Lourenço,
Portuguese Macau Portuguese Macau (officially the Province of Macau until 1976, and then the Autonomous Region of Macau from 1976 to 1999) was a Portuguese colony that existed from the first official Portuguese settlement in 1557 to the end of colonial ru ...
) was an officer of the Portuguese Army in Macau. He is widely remembered for his role at the Portuguese attack of Baishaling,Cantonese: Pak Shan Lan in 1849. He was the oldest of the five children of noted Macanese lawyer, Frederico Albino de Mesquita and Clara Esmeralda Carneiro - both Macau natives. He married twice; first to Balbina Maria da Silveira; second to his
sister-in-law A sibling-in-law is the spouse of one's sibling, or the sibling of one's spouse, or the person who is married to the sibling of one's spouse.Cambridge Dictionaries Online.Family: non-blood relations. More commonly, a sibling-in-law is referred ...
Carolina Maria Josefa da Silveira.


Baishaling Incident

Immediately after a Chinese mob assassinated Governor Ferreira do Amaral on August 22, 1849, Chinese Imperial troops mobilized on the Guangdong Province-Macau frontier. The Portuguese population of Macau viewed this as an overtly threatening move by the Chinese to retake Macau. On August 25, 1849, with a numerically smaller group of 36 soldiers from his Artillery Battalion, against a defending force of 400 men and 20 cannons, the then Second Lieutenant Mesquita attacked and pacified the Chinese fort at Baishaling. This coup guaranteed Macau's security and upon his return to the city, Mesquita was received as a national hero.


Later years

In later years, Mesquita was wracked by depression due to his slow and inadequate promotion in the Portuguese military, allegedly due to being Macanese. He was further saddened by the lack official recognition of his role in protecting Macau. As a result, he suffered a series of severe nervous breakdowns - the last of which prompted his permanent retirement. His professional and personal life deteriorated rapidly afterwards. His madness reached its zenith on March 3, 1880 - at his fashionable home: nº 1, Largo da Bica do Lilau - when Mesquita murdered his second wife, a daughter and gravely wounded two other of his children. Afterwards, on that same day, Mesquia committed suicide by throwing himself down a well at his home. Under these circumstances, the then present
Governor of Macau The governor of Macau ( pt, Governador de Macau; ) was a Portuguese colonial official who headed the colony of Macau, before 1623 called captain-major ( pt, Capitão-mor). The post was replaced on 20 December 1999 upon the transfer of sove ...
would not accord him a military burial, nor would the Bishop of Macau allow his remains to be placed in consecrated ground. Some thirty years later, on August 28, 1910, in conformity with public opinion on the importance of this man to the history of Macau, were his remains re-interred in the Cemitério de São Miguel with full military and ecclesiastical honors.


Military career

* June 9, 1835 - voluntarily enlisted in Batalhão do Principe Regente. * August 29, 1848 - promoted to second lieutenant in the Artillery Battalion of Macau, by patent letter. * December 12, 1850 - promoted to first lieutenant in the same Battalion by patent letter. * July 9, 1863 - made effective major, by decree of the same date. * February 7, 1867 - promoted to lieutenant colonel. * October 27, 1873 - promoted to colonel.


Notes


References

Forjaz, Jorge. ''Familias Macaenses''. Macau: Instituto Português do Oriente, 1996. . Teixeira, Manuel. ''Vicente Nicolau de Mesquita'' - Separata editada na inauguração do monumento ao herói do Passaleão. Macau: Leal Senado, 1940 Teixeira, Manuel. ''Vicente Nicolau de Mesquita'' - 2ª ed. Macau: Tipografia "Soi Sang", 1958. {{DEFAULTSORT:Mesquita, Vicente Nicolau de 1818 births 1880 deaths 19th-century Macau people Macanese people Murder–suicides in Asia 1880s suicides