About: Brazil (Alternity)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Originally discovered by Portugal's Pedro Cabral in 1500 and first colonized in 1533, Brazil was a royal colony of Portugal for nearly 300 years. In 1808, the King of Portugal, Dom João VI, fled the advancing armies of France under Napoleon Bonaparte and established Rio de Janeiro as the temporary capital of the entire Portuguese Empire until 1821, when he returned to Europe and attempted to return Brazil to colonial status. The Brazilians resisted, however, and his son, Pedro de Alcântara, was subsequently crowned Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil in 1822. Three years later, the Portuguese armies in South America surrendered and officially recognized Brazil as independent. Pedro I's sudden abdication of the throne in 1831 left a six year-old son, Pedro II, as the new emperor, and since he was

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Brazil (Alternity)
rdfs:comment
  • Originally discovered by Portugal's Pedro Cabral in 1500 and first colonized in 1533, Brazil was a royal colony of Portugal for nearly 300 years. In 1808, the King of Portugal, Dom João VI, fled the advancing armies of France under Napoleon Bonaparte and established Rio de Janeiro as the temporary capital of the entire Portuguese Empire until 1821, when he returned to Europe and attempted to return Brazil to colonial status. The Brazilians resisted, however, and his son, Pedro de Alcântara, was subsequently crowned Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil in 1822. Three years later, the Portuguese armies in South America surrendered and officially recognized Brazil as independent. Pedro I's sudden abdication of the throne in 1831 left a six year-old son, Pedro II, as the new emperor, and since he was
dcterms:subject
city largest
  • Rio de Janeiro
CoGtitle
  • Prime Minister
CoGname
  • Fernando Henrique Cardoso
city other
  • Montevideo, Sao Paulo, Salvador, Fortaleza, Asunción
HoSname
ind date
  • 1822-09-07(xsd:date)
ind from
name short
  • Brazil
est date
  • 1822(xsd:integer)
HoStitle
  • Emperor
dbkwik:alt-history...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:althistory/...iPageUsesTemplate
Timeline
  • Alternity
Name en
  • Empire of Brazil
Name
  • Império do Brasil
coa caption
  • Coat of Arms
regime
  • Constitutional monarchy
royal house
  • Braganza
Internet TLD
  • .br
Language
  • Portuguese
Currency
  • Brazilian real
Seal
  • CoA Empire of Brazil .svg
Population
  • 187516000(xsd:integer)
Flag caption
  • Flag
Governing body
  • General Assembly
motto Lang
  • Portuguese
Demonym
  • Brazilian
map width
  • 275(xsd:integer)
otl
  • Brazil, eastern Paraguay, Uruguay, Misiones and part of Corrientes Provinces of Argentina, French Guiana
seal width
  • 65(xsd:integer)
Capital
Motto
  • Ordem e Progresso
Organizations
Flag
  • Flag of Empire of Brazil .svg
motto en
  • Order and Progress
ind rec
  • 1825-08-29(xsd:date)
abstract
  • Originally discovered by Portugal's Pedro Cabral in 1500 and first colonized in 1533, Brazil was a royal colony of Portugal for nearly 300 years. In 1808, the King of Portugal, Dom João VI, fled the advancing armies of France under Napoleon Bonaparte and established Rio de Janeiro as the temporary capital of the entire Portuguese Empire until 1821, when he returned to Europe and attempted to return Brazil to colonial status. The Brazilians resisted, however, and his son, Pedro de Alcântara, was subsequently crowned Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil in 1822. Three years later, the Portuguese armies in South America surrendered and officially recognized Brazil as independent. Pedro I's sudden abdication of the throne in 1831 left a six year-old son, Pedro II, as the new emperor, and since he was still rather young, a temporary regency was created to rule on his behalf until he came of age. But internal disputes within the regency forced the General Assembly to declare the young Pedro II of age when he was only 14 years old, in July 1840 (he would be crowned Emperor one year later). Pedro II's fifty-year reign was positively marked by internal stability, economic, political, and societal growth (with the abolition of slavery in 1888) and the rise of Brazil as a regional power. He is consistently regarded and ranked by historians as one of the greatest Brazilians in the nation's history. Following his abdication due to poor health in 1891, his son, Pedro Afonso (b. 1848) succeeded him as Pedro III and continued in his father's footsteps by further advancing the national economy and modernizing and enlarging the military. He is frequently credited for bringing Brazil into the modern age. Brazil is a driving force in Latin American and global politics. As a great power in its' own right, Brazil has vied for regional supremacy with neighboring rival Colombia since independence. It is a founding and permanent member of the League of Nations, the G-11, G-30, and the South American Union (SAU), in addition to joining NATO in the post-Cold War era.
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