}} In 1493 the papal bull
inter caetera divided claims to the
New World territories between Spain and Portugal and was revised in 1494 by the
Treaty of Tordesillas which moved the dividing line further west. In late 1499 part of the expedition led by
Alonso de Ojeda, in which
Amerigo Vespucci took part, sighted Brazil. Shortly after the expedition led by
Spanish navigator and explorer
Vicente Yáñez Pinzón, a Spanish navigator who had accompanied Columbus in his first voyage of discovery to the Americas, reached the , a promontory located in the current state of
Pernambuco, on 26 January 1500. This is the oldest confirmed European landing in Brazilian territory. Pinzón was unable to claim the land because of the
Treaty of Tordesillas. In April 1500, Brazil was claimed for Portugal on
the arrival of the Portuguese fleet commanded by
Pedro Álvares Cabral. The Portuguese encountered stone-using natives divided into several tribes, many of whom shared the same
Tupi–Guarani language family, and fought among themselves. Early names for the country included
Santa Cruz (Holy Cross) and
Terra dos Papagaios (Land of the Parrots). Until 1529 Portugal had little interest in settling Brazil as it was focused on its already profitable commerce with India, China, and the East Indies. This lack of interest allowed traders, pirates, and privateers of several countries to poach profitable Brazilwood in lands claimed by Portugal, with France setting up the short-lived colony of
France Antarctique in 1555. In response, the Portuguese Crown devised a system to effectively settle Brazil. Through the
hereditary Captaincies system, they divided Brazil into strips of land and donated them to Portuguese noblemen, who were in turn responsible for occupying and administering the lands while answering to the King. The system was later substituted for a dual state government in 1572, where the country was divided into the Northern Government based in
Salvador and the Southern Government based in
Rio de Janeiro. There was also a mixing of peoples through intermarriage. Since colonial times Portuguese settlers intermarried with Indigenous and African populations. The most common marriages occurred between white (Portuguese settlers), Indigenous, and African populations. In the present, the largest ethnic groups include: those of mainly European descent (47.7% of the population), people of mixed ethnic backgrounds or
mulattos (43.1%), people entirely of African ancestry (7.6%), those with Asian ancestry (1.1%) and indigenous (0.4%).
Iberian Union In 1578, the young King
Sebastian, King of Portugal disappeared in a crusade in Morocco, during the
Battle of Alcácer Quibir. The king had entered the war without much allied support or the necessary resources to fight properly. Since he had no direct heirs,
Philip II of Spain, who was his uncle (and whose grandfather was the Portuguese King
Manuel I of Portugal), was the only successor and took control of the Portuguese administration in 1580. The 60 years of his rule is called the
Iberian Union, in reference to the
Iberian peninsula on which Spain and Portugal are located. It ended in 1640 when
John IV of Portugal,
Duke of Braganza, restored Portuguese independence and formed the 3rd Portuguese Royal Dynasty, the
House of Braganza. With the merging of the crowns in the
Iberian Union, Portuguese/Brazilian settlers were legally allowed to cross beyond the Treaty of Tordesillas line, and thus more interior expansions of Brazil began or were at least officialized and mapped during that period. Sebastian never returned which originated the messianic line of thought
Sebastianism, which asserted that the rightful King would return from the mists and restore the Kingdom to its former glory. In
Brazil the most important manifestation of Sebastianism was the
Proclamation of the Republic, when movements defending a return to the monarchy emerged. It is one the longest-lived
millenarian legends in Western Europe, and had profound political and cultural resonances from the time of Sebastian's death until at least the late 19th century in Brazil.
Indigenous rebellions in the early 19th century The
Tamoyo Confederation (
Confederação dos Tamoios in the
Portuguese language) was a
military alliance of
aboriginal chieftains of the sea coast ranging from what is today
Santos to
Rio de Janeiro, that lasted from 1554 to 1567. The main reason for this rather unusual alliance between separate
tribes was the need for collective defense against the Portuguese settlers. In the
Tupi language, "Tamuya" means 'elder' or 'grandfather'.
Cunhambebe was elected chief of the Confederation by his counterparts, and together with chiefs Pindobuçú, Koakira, Araraí and Aimberê, declared war on the Portuguese.
Sugar age Starting in the sixteenth century,
sugarcane grown on
plantations called
engenhos along the northeast coast (Brazil's
Nordeste) became the base of the Brazilian economy and social structure. Large plantations used slave labor to produce sugar for export to Europe. At first, settlers tried to enslave the
natives for these sugar plantations but soon switched to importing slaves from Africa. Portugal pioneered the plantation system in the Atlantic islands of
Madeira and
São Tomé, with forced labor, high capital inputs for machinery, slaves, and work animals. By 1570, Brazil's sugar output rivalled that of the Atlantic islands. In the mid-seventeenth century, the Dutch seized productive areas of northeast Brazil and took over the plantations. When the Dutch were expelled from Brazil, following a strong push by
Portuguese-Brazilians and their indigenous and
Afro-Brazilian allies, the Dutch as well as the English and French set up sugar production on the plantation model of Brazil in the Caribbean. Increased production and competition meant that the price of sugar dropped and Brazil's market share along with it. Brazil's recovery from the
Dutch incursion was slow since warfare had damaged much of the land and infrastructure used for the plantations. In Bahia, tobacco was cultivated for the African export market, with tobacco dipped in molasses (derived from sugar production) being traded for African slaves. Brazil's settlement and economic development was focused on its lengthy coastline. The Dutch incursion had underlined the vulnerability of Brazil to foreigners, and Portugal responded by building coastal forts and creating a marine patrol to protect the colony. ended Dutch presence in Brazil. The initial exploration of Brazil's interior was largely due to para-military adventurers, the
bandeirantes, who entered the jungle in search of gold and native slaves. However colonists were unable to continually enslave natives, and Portuguese sugar planters soon turned to import millions of slaves from Africa. Mortality rates for slaves in sugar and gold enterprises were dramatic, and there were often not enough women or proper conditions for the slave population to increase through reproduction, forced or otherwise. (1494), signed between
Spain and
Portugal to distribute the lands discovered and "to be discovered", defined the course of the history of the "future" Brazil. Still, Africans became a substantial section of the Brazilian population, and long before the end of slavery (1888) they had begun to merge with the European Brazilian population through intermarriage. During the first 150 years of the colonial period, attracted by the vast natural resources and untapped land, other European powers tried to establish colonies in several parts of Brazilian territory, in defiance of the
papal bull (
Inter caetera) and the
Treaty of Tordesillas.
French colonists tried to settle in present-day
Rio de Janeiro, from 1555 to 1567 (the so-called
France Antarctique episode), and in present-day
São Luís, from 1612 to 1614 (the so-called
France Équinoxiale).
Jesuits arrived early and established
São Paulo, and began evangelizing the natives. These native allies of the Jesuits assisted the Portuguese in driving out the French. The unsuccessful Dutch intrusion into Brazil was longer lasting and more troublesome to Portugal (
Dutch Brazil). Dutch privateers began by plundering the coast: they sacked
Bahia in 1604, and even temporarily captured the capital
Salvador. From 1630 to 1654, the Dutch set up more permanently in the northwest and controlled a long stretch of the coast most accessible to Europe, without, however, penetrating the interior. But the colonists of the
Dutch West India Company in Brazil were in a constant state of siege, despite the presence in
Recife of
John Maurice of Nassau as governor. After several years of open warfare, the
Dutch withdrew by 1654. Little French and Dutch cultural and ethnic influences remained from these failed attempts and the Portuguese subsequently defended the Brazilian coastline more vigorously.
Slave rebellions }} Slave rebellions were frequent until the practice of slavery was abolished in 1888. The most famous of the revolts was led by
Zumbi dos Palmares. The state he established, named the Quilombo dos Palmares, was a self-sustaining republic of
Maroons escaped from the
Portuguese settlements in Brazil, and was "a region perhaps the size of Portugal in the hinterland of Pernambuco". At its height, Palmares had a population of over 30,000. Forced to defend against repeated attacks by
Portuguese colonial power, the warriors of Palmares were experts in
capoeira, a martial arts form developed in Brazil by African slaves in the 16th century. An African known only as Zumbi was born free in Palmares in 1655 but was captured by the Portuguese and given to a missionary, Father Antônio Melo when he was approximately 6 years old. Baptized Francisco, Zumbi was taught the sacraments, learned Portuguese and Latin, and helped with daily
mass. Despite attempts to "civilize" him, Zumbi escaped in 1670 and, at the age of 15, returned to his birthplace. Zumbi became known for his physical prowess and cunning in battle and was a respected military strategist by the time he was in his early twenties. By 1678, the governor of the captaincy of
Pernambuco, Pedro Almeida, weary of the longstanding conflict with Palmares, approached its leader
Ganga Zumba with a peace offering. Almeida offered freedom for all runaway slaves if Palmares would submit to Portuguese authority, a proposal which Ganga Zumba favoured. But Zumbi was distrustful of the Portuguese. Further, he refused to accept freedom for the people of Palmares while other Africans remained enslaved. He rejected Almeida's overture and challenged Ganga Zumba's leadership. Vowing to continue the resistance to Portuguese oppression, Zumbi became the new leader of Palmares. Fifteen years after Zumbi assumed leadership of Palmares, Portuguese military commanders Domingos Jorge Velho and Vieira de Melo mounted an artillery assault on the quilombo. On February 6, 1694, after 67 years of ceaseless conflict with the
cafuzos (Maroons) of Palmares, the Portuguese succeeded in destroying
Cerca do Macaco, the republic's central settlement. Palmares' warriors were no match for the Portuguese artillery; the republic fell, and Zumbi was wounded. Though he survived and managed to elude the Portuguese, he was betrayed, captured almost two years later and beheaded on the spot on November 20, 1695. The Portuguese transported Zumbi's head to
Recife, where it was displayed in the central
praça as proof that, contrary to popular legend among African slaves, Zumbi was not immortal. It was also done as a warning of what would happen to others who attempted rebellion.
Gold and diamond rush The discovery of gold in the early eighteenth century was met with great enthusiasm by Portugal, which had been in economic disarray following years of wars against Spain and the Netherlands. A
gold rush quickly ensued, with people from other parts of the colony and Portugal flooding the region in the first half of the eighteenth century. The large portion of the Brazilian inland where gold was extracted became known as the
Minas Gerais (General Mines). Gold mining in this area became the main economic activity of colonial Brazil during the eighteenth century. In Portugal, the gold was mainly used to pay for industrialized goods (textiles, weapons) obtained from countries such as England and, especially during the reign of
King John V, to build
Baroque monuments such as the
Convent of Mafra. In Brasil it resulted in the emergence of towns and cities that are today UNESCO World Heritage Sites such as
Ouro Preto, one of the largest and most populous towns in the Americas during that period, and many other historical towns with significant
architecture:
Paraty,
Olinda,
Congonhas,
Goiás,
Diamantina,
Salvador,
São Luís, Maranhão,
São Francisco Square,
Cathedral Basilica of Salvador and Rio de Janeiro. is the jewel in the crown of Minas Gerais's colonial towns. It was Brazil's wealthiest city during the 18th-century gold boom. Besides being an open-air museum, Ouro Preto is also a major university town, with a youthful and vibrant ambience. Minas Gerais was the gold mining centre of Brazil, during the 18th century. Slave labour was generally used for the workforce. The discovery of gold in the area caused a huge influx of European immigrants and the government decided to bring in bureaucrats from Portugal to control operations. They set up numerous bureaucracies, often with conflicting duties and jurisdictions. The officials generally proved unequal to the task of controlling this highly lucrative industry. Following Brazilian independence, the British pursued extensive economic activity in Brazil. In 1830, the
Saint John d'El Rey Mining Company, controlled by the British, opened the largest gold mine in Latin America. The British brought in modern management techniques and engineering expertise. Located in
Nova Lima, the mine produced ore for 125 years. Diamond deposits were found near Vila do Príncipe, around the village of Tijuco in the 1720s, and a rush to extract the precious stones ensued, flooding the European market. The Portuguese crown intervened to control production in
Diamantina, the Diamond District. A system of bids for the right to extract diamonds was established, but in 1771, it was abolished and the crown retained the monopoly. Mining stimulated regional growth in southern Brazil, not just from the extraction of gold and diamonds, but also the
secondary and
tertiary industries that arose to support the central mining operations. More importantly, it stimulated commerce and the development of merchant communities in port cities. ==Kingdom and Empire of Brazil==