Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889

The Empire of Brazil was a parliamentary democratic constitutional monarchy of the nineteenth century that covered the areas of modern Brazil and Uruguay.

Brazil was originally a colony of the Portuguese Empire but became its center when the Prince Regent João VI fled the French invasion of Portugal in 1808. When João returned to Portugal he left his son Pedro as regent of the autonomous Kingdom of Brazil.

Empire of Brazil
Império do Brasil
1822–1889
Motto: Independência ou Morte!
"Independence or Death!"
Anthem: Anthem of Independence (1822-1831)

Brazilian National Anthem (1831–1889)
Map of South America with the Empire of Brazil highlighted in green
The Empire of Brazil including the former Cisplatina province.
CapitalRio de Janeiro
22°54′30″S 43°11′47″W / 22.90833°S 43.19639°W / -22.90833; -43.19639
Common languagesPortuguese
Religion
Roman Catholic
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy parliamentary unitary state representative democracy
Emperor of Brazil 
• 1822–1831
Pedro I
• 1831–1889
Pedro II
LegislatureGeneral Assembly
Senate
Chamber of Deputies
Historical era19th century
• Independence
7 September 1822
• Accession of Pedro I
12 October 1822
• Imperial Constitution adopted
25 March 1824
• Accession of Pedro II
7 April 1831
• Slavery abolished
13 May 1888
• Monarchy abolished
15 November 1889
CurrencyReal
ISO 3166 codeBR
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889 Kingdom of Portugal
Brazilian Republic Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889
Uruguay Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889
Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889
Declaration of the independence of Brazil on September 7, 1822.

On 7 September 1822, Pedro declared Brazil to be an independent Empire and was acclaimed by the people as emperor. However, in 1831 he was able to return to Portugal. He abdicated the Brazilian throne and left his young son Pedro II as emperor. His reign saw three international wars and decades of economic prosperity and political stability.

Pedro I, Pedro II and the imperial family of Brazil wanted the abolition of slavery, and on 13 May 1888 the imperial princess regent, Isabel de Bragança and Bourbon signed the Golden Law on behalf of her father, ending slavery in Brazil. By that time, Brazil had become the last major nation to have slavery. Former plantation owners, dissatisfied with the abolition of slavery, joined the republican movement led by Deodoro da Fonseca, an elderly Marshal, to carry out a Coup d'etat and install a republic which became Brazil's first dictatorship on November 15, 1889. The imperial family was exiled, and the Republican government persecuted, tortured and killed all those who opposed the regime.

References

Other websites

Empire Of Brazil: Empire in South America between 1822 and 1889  Media related to Empire of Brazil at Wiki Commons


Tags:

BrazilConstitutional monarchyDemocracyParliamentary systemPortugalPortuguese EmpirePrince RegentUruguay

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki Simple English:

ContinentSexual intercourse20 (number)ShivajiList of best-selling video gamesASCIIJupiterSalman KhanTagalog languageJeff SaturGeorge MichaelHuman penis sizeList of tallest buildings in New York CityList of cities in China by populationRadishGérard HoullierNational Democratic AllianceList of last surviving World War I veterans by country98 (number)List of Roman gods and goddessesRussiaList of World Chess ChampionsNovemberZinedine ZidaneIsaac NewtonPortugalUrban areaRamaLina MedinaMarie AntoinetteDenmarkAlbert EinsteinLiverpoolDavidThe Fappening19 (number)Orders of magnitude (time)United statesList of tallest people in the worldAl-Masjid an-NabawiTBS (American TV channel)RiyadhSaturnEastern EuropePawn shop84 (number)Atlantic OceanQueen (band)List of presidents of IndiaClamSteve Jobs7-ElevenAustraliaAcademic grading in the PhilippinesVisaGarry NewmanMamata BanerjeeFarmingNursultan RuziboevWiki FoundationSaint PeterTelegramFantaNarendra Modi StadiumNigerian nairaSuhani BhatnagarPeléList of districts of MaharashtraEuropeList of languagesLondonJacqueline FernandezList of political parties in the United KingdomArabic languageList of Indian scientistsGanesha17 (number)🡆 More