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Brazil - History |  | Brazil - History: Encyclopedia II - Brazil - History |  | Brazil is thought to have been inhabited for at least 10,000 years by semi-nomadic populations when the first Portuguese explorers, led by Pedro Álvares Cabral, disembarked in 1500. Over the next three centuries, it was resettled by the Portuguese and exploited mainly for brazilwood (Pau-Brasil) at first, and later for sugarcane(Cana-de-Açúcar) agriculture and gold mining. The colony's source of manpower was initially on enslaved Amerindians, and after 1550, mainly African slaves. In 1808, Queen Maria I of Portugal and her son and regent, ...
See also:Brazil, Brazil - History, Brazil - Politics, Brazil - States, Brazil - Geography, Brazil - Economy, Brazil - Demographics, Brazil - Ethnicity and race, Brazil - Languages, Brazil - Religion, Brazil - Poverty illiteracy and income concentration, Brazil - International rankings, Brazil - Culture, Brazil - Flora and fauna, Brazil - Sports, Brazil - Notes |  | | Brazil, Brazil - Culture, Brazil - Demographics, Brazil - Economy, Brazil - Ethnicity and race, Brazil - Flora and fauna, Brazil - Geography, Brazil - History, Brazil - International rankings, Brazil - Languages, Brazil - Notes, Brazil - Politics, Brazil - Poverty illiteracy and income concentration, Brazil - Religion, Brazil - Sports, Brazil - States, Protected areas of Brazil, List of mountains in Brazil, Extreme points of Brazil |  | |
|  |  | Brazil: Encyclopedia II - Brazil - History
Brazil - History
Main article: History of Brazil
Brazil is thought to have been inhabited for at least 10,000 years by semi-nomadic populations when the first Portuguese explorers, led by Pedro Álvares Cabral, disembarked in 1500. Over the next three centuries, it was resettled by the Portuguese and exploited mainly for brazilwood (Pau-Brasil) at first, and later for sugarcane(Cana-de-Açúcar) agriculture and gold mining. The colony's source of manpower was initially on enslaved Amerindians, and after 1550, mainly African slaves. In 1808, Queen Maria I of Portugal and her son and regent, the future João VI of Portugal, fleeing from Napoleon, relocated to Brazil with the royal family, nobles and government. Though they returned to Portugal in 1821, the interlude led to the opening of commercial ports to the United Kingdom — at the time isolated from most European ports by Napoleon — and to the elevation of Brazil to the status of a united kingdom with Portugal's Crown. Then prince regent Dom Pedro I (later Pedro IV of Portugal) declared independence on 7 September 1822, establishing the independent Empire of Brazil. As the crown remained in the hands of the house of Bragança, this was more the severance of the Portuguese empire in two, than an independence movement as seen elsewhere in the Americas.
The Brazilian Empire was theoretically a democracy in the British style, although in practice, the emperor-premier-parliament balance of power more closely resembled the autocratic Austrian Empire. Slavery was abolished in 1888, and intensive European immigration created the basis for industrialization. Pedro I was succeeded by his son, Pedro II — who in old age was caught by a political dispute between the Army and the Cabinet, a crisis arising from the Paraguay War. In order to avoid a civil war between Army and Navy, Pedro II renounced the throne on 15 November 1889, when a federal republic was established by Field Marshal Deodoro da Fonseca.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Brazil attracted over 5 million European and Japanese immigrants. That period also saw Brazil industrialise, further colonize, and develop its interior. Brazilian democracy was replaced by dictatorships three times — 1930–1934 and 1937–1945 under Getúlio Vargas, and 1964–1985, under a succession of generals appointed by the military. Today, Brazil is internationally considered a democracy since 1985, specifically a presidential democracy, which was kept after a plebiscite in 1993 where voters had to choose between a presidential or parliamentary systems, whilst also choosing if Brazil should reinstate its constitutional monarchy.
Other related archives1 January, 15 November, 1822, 1889, 19th, 2003, 20th, 7 September, Congresso Nacional, Câmara dos Deputados, Senado Federal, A.T. Kearney, African, Amazon, Amazon Basin, Amazon Rainforest, Americas, Amerindian, Amerindians, Angola, Arab, Arab Brazilians, Argentina, Asian, Asian Brazilians, Atlantic, Atlantic Ocean, Austrian, Austrian Empire, Benin, Black, Bolivia, Bovespa, Brazil Skyscrapers, Brazil national football team, Brazilian Carnival, Brazilian Football League Teams, Brazilian Portuguese, Brazilian jiu-jitsu, British style, CIA World Factbook, Cabinet, Candomblé, Capoeira, Catholic, Center-West, Chamber of Deputies, Chile, Chinese, Christian, Cinema of Brazil, Colombia, Columbia University Center for International Earth Science Information Network, Communications in Brazil, Cuisine of Brazil, Culture of Brazil, Demographics of Brazil, Division by Regions, Dom Pedro I, Dutch, Economy of Brazil, Ecuador, Empire of Brazil, English, European, European Portuguese, European immigration, Extreme points of Brazil, Fernando de Noronha, Field Marshal Deodoro da Fonseca, Fome Zero, Foreign Policy Magazine, Foreign relations of Brazil, French, French Guiana, GDP, Geography of Brazil, German, Germans, Germans-Brazilians, Getúlio Vargas, Ghana, Guarani, Guiana, Guyana, History of Brazil, Holidays in Brazil, Human rights in Brazil, Hungarian, Hunsrückisch, IBGE, IMD International, IMF, IPA, Iguaçu, Index of Economic Freedom, Indian reservations, Indigenous peoples in Brazil, Italian, Italian dialect, Italian-descended Brazilians, Italians, Italy, Ivory Coast, Japan, Japanese, Japanese-Brazilians, João VI of Portugal, Korean, Korean language, Latin America, Latin American, Lebanese, Lebanon, List of Brazilian birds, List of Brazilian companies, List of Brazilian mammals, List of Brazilian reptiles, List of Brazilians, List of cities in Brazil, List of major cities in Brazil, List of mountains in Brazil, Literature of Brazil, Lithuanian, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Madeira, Maria I of Portugal, Middle-East, Military of Brazil, Music of Brazil, Napoleon, Native Brazilians, Nigeria, North, Northeast, Paraguay, Paraguay War, Paraná, Pedro II, Pedro Álvares Cabral, Pele, Peru, Pico da Neblina, Poles, Polish, Politics of Brazil, Portugal, Portuguese, Precipitation, President, Protected areas of Brazil, Protestantism, Public holidays in Brazil, Real, Religion in Brazil, Reporters without borders, Rio Negro, Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, Rivaldo, Rocas Atoll, Roman Catholic, Ronaldo, Russian, Saint Peter and Paul Rocks, Save the Children, Science and technology in Brazil, Senate, South, South America, Southeast, Spain, Spaniards, Spanish, Spiritism, Sports in Brazil, States of Brazil, Suriname, Swiss, Syria, Syrian, São Francisco, São Paulo, São Tomé e Príncipe, São Vicente, Taiwanese, Talian, Tapajós, The Economist, The Wall Street Journal, Togo, Transparency International, Transportation in Brazil, Trindade and Martim Vaz, Tucano, Tupi, US dollar, Ukrainian, United Kingdom, United Nations Development Programme, Uruguay, Vale tudo, Venetian Language, Venezuela, WEF, Western world, World Cup, World Cup trophy, World Economic Forum, Xingu, Yale University Center for Environmental Law and Policy, agricultural, airplanes, black, brazilwood, cafuzo, climate, coffee, colonization, colony, constitution, constitutional monarchy, democracy, dictatorships, dry, electrical equipment, enslaved, equator, executive, federal republic, footwear, gold mining, head of government, head of state, highlands, house of Bragança, hunger, immigrants, immigration, inflationary, iron ore, islands, jiu-jitsu, legislature, mameluco, manufacturing, melting-pot, mining, mixed-race, most populous country, mulatto, official language, orange juice, parliamentary systems, plebiscite, poverty, presidential, pron., proportional representation, rain forests, regions, service sectors, slaves, soybean, steel, sugarcane, textiles, the Americas, tropical, vehicles
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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