Problem is that King D. Manuel II - who was the last chain of the senior Bragança line (descending from King D. Pedro IV) - is said[FONT=Verdana, sans-serif] to have signed the Pact of Dover, which states that, since he had no children, the Duchy of Bragança would pass to his cousin, D. Duarte Nuno, and his family... I didn't see the document, but some people say there are no signatures in that paper.[/FONT]
This
Pacto is not valid for the simple reason that it didn't exist.
This is the only document related to the Pact of Dover that we can find.
It has no signatures at all. I've never heard about a valid document without signatures of both parts.
Besides, why should be D. Manuel worried with the Royal Sucession if he was only 23 at the time?!
I don´t know who is this "Mr. van Uden".
D. Duarte de Bragança and D. Francisco Van Uden are Cousins.
Like Elsa said,
Dom Francisco Van Uden is the son of Dona Maria Adelaide de Bragança, Infanta of Portugal. Dª Adelaide is D. Duarte's aunt, since she was sister of D. Duarte's father (D. Duarte Nuno).
Dona Adelaide and Dom Duarte Nuno were the younger children of D. Miguel de Bragança. Dom Miguel has always lived on exile. The
Miguelistas were banned from Portugal around 1830.
D. Duarte Nuno could never been chosen as a royal pretender because he was an Austrian, not a Portuguese. His sisters (including Dona Maria Adelaide) were not Portuguese either.
D. Duarte Pio (his son) was born in Switzerland as an Austrian, just like his father.
Dª Adelaide is a mother of 4 children: Francisco Van Uden is the third one. Together with his younger and only sister, they are the only children of her who were born in Portugal. The Royal Constitutional Letter of 1842, article 8, says that a future king cannot be naturalized in foreign soil, as it happened with D. Duarte Nuno and his son.
Therefore, D. Francisco Van Uden is the right Pretender to the Throne of Portugal.
D. Duarte Nuno claimed that he and his son, D. Duarte Pio, were born as Portuguese. But I (and many others!) don't believe that is true. What most probably happened was a falsification (in 1961) of the birth certificates of him and his son. I say this because it is
impossible that D. Duarte Pio had been born (1945) in the Portuguese Embassy of Bern, when the Law of Banishment was only revogated in 1950. In 1945, Duarte Nuno was not a Portuguese (he was banned!), so his son could never be allowed to be born in Portuguese Territory. Even if that happened, it would be an
illegal decision, contrary to the monarchist Law of Nationality of 1826.