The history of the captaincies is turbulent, reflecting the needs of the Kings of Portugal, a small European country, to colonize and govern an enormous expanse of South America. Throughout the early colonial era Captaincies were granted, divided, subordinated, annexed, and abandoned. In 1548 when the captaincy of
Baía de Todos os Santos (Bahia) reverted to the Crown due to the massacre, by indigenous cannibals, of its donee, Francisco Pereira Coutinho and his settlers; the King, Dom João III, established a royal governor (later a governor-general) at Bahia. At the same time Dom João rescinded some of the expansive privileges he had previously granted the donatarios (lords-proprietor). However, clearly demonstrating the crowns desire to accommodate whatever worked, Dom João instructed his first Governor to visit all the remaining captaincies, except for Pernambuco, the one singularly successful captaincy. In fact no royal governor visited Pernambuco until the Seventeenth Century. The captaincies continued to exist as governments subordinate to the royal governors, governors-general, and viceroys. All captaincies, sooner or later, reverted to being royal rather than proprietary captaincies (variously thru some failure or repurchase by the crown). During the
Philippine Dynasty, some of the captaincies attained the status of provinces with royal governors (i.e. "states"), and Portuguese Brazil thereafter was a mixture of donatary captaincies, royal captaincies and states.
List of post-1549 captaincies Some complications result from captaincies being merged and recreated with the same name, but representing altered regions. At least a few of the later captaincies were islands or capes of negligible size. Dates are of independent captaincies; in some cases, new captaincies were created as administrative divisions or subcaptaincies of existing ones before becoming fully independent (eg. Para was established as early as 1616 as a north and westward annex of Maranhão). • Fernando de Noronha (not occupied or abandoned) 1504-1737 • Itaparica and Itamarandiba (islands), 1556, split from Bahia •
Rio de Janeiro, 1563, renamed first (northern) section of São Vicente + Paraiba do Sul(?) • Paraguaçu, 1566, carved from Bahia •
Paraíba, 1580, created from part of Rio Grande, enlarged by acquisition of most of Itamaracá, 1585 • Rio Grande de Norte, 1597, merger of northern portion of Rio Grande, Ceara and Maranhão • Cabo Frio, 1615, promontory in Rio de Janeiro • Pará, ~1616 as division of Maranhão from newly incorporated territory west of the Tordesillas Line; independent in 1652 • Itapecuru (renamed
Icatu after 1691), 1621 • Caeté (originally Captaincy of Vera Cruz de Gurupi), 1622, merged into Maranhão 1654 •
Itanhaém, 1624 • Paranaguá, 1624 • Paraíba do Sul (originally São Tomé), 1629 • Gurupa, 1633 • Santa Cruz de Cametá, within Grão-Para on the lower Amazon, 1633 (see
Cametá) • Rio São Francisco, ~1634 • Cabo Norte, 1637, from newly incorporated territory; merged into Maranhão 1654 • Vigia, 1652 • Ilha Grande (island of Marajo), 1665, merged into Maranhão • Xingu, 1685, within Maranhão • Ararobá, 1690, within Pernambuco • São Paulo and Minas de Ouro, 1709, renamed from São Vicente • Minas Gerais, 1720, split from São Paulo and Minas de Ouro •
São Paulo, 1720, remaining after Minas Gerais split • Mearim, 1723, within Maranhão •
Cumã, 1727, sub-captaincy split from Maranhão; • Santa Catarina, 1739, split from São Paulo • Goiaz, 1748, split from São Paulo • Mato Grosso, 1748, split from São Paulo • São José de Rio Negro (most of Amazonia region), 1755, split from Pará •
Grão-Pará, 1755, renamed portion of Pará after Rio Negro split • Piauí, 1759, split from Maranhão • Espírito Santo, 1799, independent from Bahia • Rio Grande do Sul, 1760, newly incorporated territory of Rio Grande de São Pedro • Ceará, 1799, split from Pernambuco • Rio Grande do Norte, 1808, split from Pernambuco •
Alagoas, 1817, split from Pernambuco • Colônia de Caiena e Guiana, 1809, annexation of French Guiana • Sergipe, 1820, split from Bahia == Pernambuco and São Vicente ==