MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · June 25 · 1975
ON THIS DAY · 25 JUNE 1975
Maputo — Mozambique is free

25 Jun 1975 — Samora Machel’s FRELIMO inherits a country with a few hundred African graduates and a settler exodus under way. Within two years, a South African–backed insurgency begins.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
While the rest of the continent turned red through the 1960s, three great blocks stayed stubbornly tan: Portugal’s empire — Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau — held on longest of all. Why? Because Portugal was itself a poor dictatorship, Salazar’s Estado Novo, that could not imagine survival without its “overseas provinces”; it declared them legally part of Portugal, encouraged white settlers into their coffee and cotton lands, and resolved to fight where richer democracies had bargained. So the liberation here had to be won by war. Amílcar Cabral’s PAIGC in Guinea-Bissau (the intellectuals’ war, and the most successful), FRELIMO in Mozambique, and the divided movements of Angola — MPLA, FNLA, UNITA — fought Portugal from the early 1960s in three separate bush wars, financed and armed across the Cold War divide, marked here by the war-hatches that persist across a decade.
From Chapter 8 — The Portuguese Empire Falls Last of The Decolonization of Africa, 1945–1994 (AUG 1975).
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TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Why Lisbon could not let go. Unlike Britain and France, Portugal was Europe’s poorest state and an authoritarian one; Salazar’s regime staked its legitimacy on being a great…
- The turn — Luanda, 11 November 1975 — freedom and civil war on the same day. As Portugal’s flag comes down, three liberation movements are already fighting for the capital, Cuban troops are landing to hold it for the MPLA,…
- What it changed — Five flags in one year. Guinea-Bissau (recognized 1974), then in 1975 Mozambique, Angola, and the island states — the last major European empire on the continent dissolved…
Then ask the room: Why did the Portuguese empire, the weakest of the colonial powers, hold on to its African colonies longest — and why did it then collapse all at once? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
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