José Luciano de Castro Pereira Corte-Real (1834–1914) was a Portuguese politician who served three terms as President of the Council of Ministers (Prime Minister). He was one of the founders of the Progressist Party, of which he was the leader from the time of Anselmo José Braamcamp's death in 1885, onward.
de Castro was the head of government during the pink-map crisis and the subsequent British ultimatum. The crisis was one of the factors that proved decisive in the fall of the Portuguese constitutional monarchy on 5 October 1910.
Preceded by Fontes Pereira de Melo |
Prime Minister of Portugal (President of the Council of Ministers) 1886–1890 |
Succeeded by António de Serpa Pimentel |
Preceded by Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro |
Prime Minister of Portugal (President of the Council of Ministers) 1897–1900 |
Succeeded by Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro |
Preceded by Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro |
Prime Minister of Portugal (President of the Council of Ministers) 1904–1906 |
Succeeded by Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro |
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