Establishment of Dutch Brazil Successful 1630 invasion In the summer of 1629, the Dutch coveted a newfound interest in obtaining the captaincy of
Pernambuco, the largest and richest sugar-producing area in the world. The Dutch fleet of 65 ships was led by
Hendrick Corneliszoon Loncq; the GWC
gained control of Olinda by 16 February 1630, and Recife (the capital of Pernambuco) and António Vaz by March 3. In 1635, the Dutch conquered three strongholds of the Portuguese: the towns of
Porto Calvo, Arraial do Bom Jesus, and Fort Nazaré on Cabo de Santo Agostinho. These strongholds gave the Dutch increased sugar lands which led to an increase in profit.
Dutch Brazil under Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen In 1637, the GWC gave control of its Brazilian conquests, now called "Nieuw Holland," to John Maurice of Nassau, the great-nephew of
William the Silent. Within the year, Maurice of Nassau captured the
captaincy of Ceará and sent an expedition to capture the West African trading post of
Elmina Castle, which became the capital of the
Dutch Gold Coast. In 1641, the Dutch captured the captaincy of
Maranhão, meaning that Dutch control now extended across the entire coastline between the
Amazon and
São Francisco Rivers.
Governance under Maurits in Recife is the oldest synagogue in the Americas. An estimated number of 700 Jews lived in Dutch Brazil, about 4.7% of the total population Maurice claimed to have always loved Brazil due to its beauty and its people, and under his rule, the colony thrived. His patronage of Dutch Golden Age painters to depict Brazil, such as
Albert Eckhout and
Frans Post, resulted in works showing different races, landscapes, and still lifes. He also invited naturalists
Georg Marcgrave and
Willem Piso to Brazil. They collected and published a vast amount of information on Brazil's natural history, resulting in the 1648 publication of
Historia Naturalis Brasiliae, the first organized European compendium of knowledge on the Americas, which was hugely influential in learned European scientific circles for well over a century. Maurits organized a form of representative local government by creating municipal councils and rural councils with both Dutch and Portuguese members to represent the population. Maurits worked through the councils to begin modernizing the country with streets, bridges, and roads in Recife. On the island of António Vaz, he founded the town of
Mauritsstad (also known as Mauricia), where he created an
astronomic observatory and a meteorological station, which were the first created by Europeans in the Americas. Under Maurits, protection for Portuguese Jews, who had been ostracized to that point, was increased. He allowed former Jews who had been forced to convert to Christianity to return to their former faith. Non-Catholic Christians, such as Calvinists, were also allowed to practice their faith as part of religious toleration. Furthermore, the Catholic majority in Dutch Brazil was allowed to practice their faith freely, at a time in history in which there was extreme religious conflicts such as the Thirty Years' War between Catholics and Protestants. This was formed into the new law of Dutch Brazil in the peace accord signed after the conquest of the captaincy of Paraiba. The monastic orders of the Franciscans, Carmelites, and Benedictines were quite prominent in the former Portuguese colony. They were also allowed to retain all of their friaries and monasteries and allowed to practice and preach Catholicism among the population.
Population of Dutch Brazil Although there were Dutch immigrants to Brazil, the majority of the population was Portuguese and Brazilian-born Portuguese, African slaves, and Amerindians, with Dutch rule an overlay on pre-existing social groups. Dutch Brazil had difficulty in attracting Dutch colonists, as the main attraction of the colony was the wealth one could gain from a sugar plantation, as Brazil was a major supplier of sugar to Europe. Since this would also entail buying African slaves, only a rich man could afford to start a plantation. There was also very significant risk with border contention and skirmish with the Portuguese from the parts of Brazil still under their control and the nonexistent loyalty of the local Portuguese to the Dutch colony. Most of the Dutchmen employed by the Dutch West India Company went back to the Netherlands after they were relieved of duty and did not stay to settle the colony. The Dutch were a ruling minority over a predominantly Portuguese-speaking population. The Dutch colonists were divided into two separate groups, the first of which was known as
dienaren (servants). The
dienaren were soldiers, officials, and Calvinist ministers employed by the GWC.
Vrijburgheren ("free gentlemen") – or
vrijluiden – were the second group of Dutch settlers who did not fit into the category of
dienaren. The
vrijburgheren were mostly soldiers formerly employed by the GWC, who later settled as farmers or
engenho lords. Others who did not fit the
vrijburgher or
dienar categories included Dutch who left the Netherlands to find a new life in Nieuw Holland as traders. Most trade in Nieuw Holland was under the control of this group. ==The end of Dutch Brazil==