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English Pages 398 [407] Year 1966
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A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF BRAZIL Edited by
E.
Bradford Burns
Covering the sweep of Brazilian his tory from the Treaty of Tordesilhas in 1494 to the Revolution of 1964, this collection presents outstanding politi cal, economic, and cultural documents that help to explain the broader cur rents of Brazilian development.
It
includes selections from novels and poetry, as well as state papers, autobi ographical sketches and travelogues. Professor Burns· perceptive introduc tion clari fies the major historical themes in Brazil's development-ex pansion and conquest, political evolu tion from colony to kingdom to empire to republic, and the fusion of Euro pean, African, and Indian races into a homogeneous society-and offers an exciting overview of Brazilian history.
,)
E. Bradford Burns, Assistant Pro
fessor of History at the University of California at Los Angeles, received his B.A. from the State University of Iowa, his M.A. from Tulane, and his Ph.D. from Columbia. He has also studied at the Universities of Guate mala and Lisbon, and at the Central University of Venezuela. Professor Burns has been Spanish-Portuguese language consultant to the Council on Foreign Relations and guest lec turer at the University of Parana in Brazil. He is the author of The Un
written Alliance: Baron Rio-Branco and Brazilian-American Relations, a study in the diplomatic history of the two countries.
PRINTED
11'\"
U.S.A.
A D O C UMENTARY H ISTORY O F B RA Z I L
Borzoi Books
oN
LATIN AMERICA
General Editor LEWIS
HANKE
COLUMBIA
UNIVERSITY
A Docum.entary History OF BRAZIL E D I T E D WI TH
A N
I N T R O D U C T I O N
BY
E. Bradford Burns
University of California at Los Angeles
N EW Y O R K :
Alfred A. Knopf
Marin County Free library Civic Center Administration Building San Rafael, California
L. C. catalog card number: 65-17482 THIS PUBLISHED
I S A BY
B O R Z OI
ALFRED
A.
BOOK, KNOPF, INC.
COPY RIGHT @ 1966 BY E. BRADFORD BURNS. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review to be printed in a magazine or newspaper. Manufactured in the United States of America and distributed by Random House, Inc. Published simultaneously in Toronto, Canada, by Random House of Canada Limited. FI R ST
E DITION
Dedicated with deepest gratitude to Charles Gibson William J. Griffith Frank Tannenbaum Lewis Hanke
*
A CK N OWL E D G M E NTS
My thanks are due foremost to Dr. Lewis Hanke whose good advice was indispensable and whose constant encourage ment was appreciated. I thank the following scholars for their suggestions and comments : in Brazil, David Carneiro, Francisco Iglesias, Caio Prado Junior, Jose Hon6rio Rodri gues, Luiz Viana Filho, and Helio Vianna; in Great Britain, C. R. Boxer; in the United States, Dauril Alden, Harry Bernstein, Troy S. Floyd, Richard Graham, John J. Johnson, Charles J. Kolinski, Joseph Love, Rollie E. Poppino, Engel Sluiter, Donald Warren Jr., John D. Wirth, and Donald E. Worcester. Nicholas Polites read the introductions to the documents and made valuable suggestions. Stanley L. Rose translated very ably the carta de doa�iio and floral of Duarte Coelho. I translated those other documents which appear in English for the first time. A grant from the Newberry Library and the assistance of its excellent staff, particularly Frederick Holden Hall, permitted me to complete a good portion of this book during the summer of 1 964. I was pleased to have had the opportunity to become well acquainted with the Greenlee Collection of Braziliana. It merits the attention of scholars and students of Luso-Brazilian studies. E.
Los Angeles November, 1 9 65
B R A D FO R D
BURNS
Contents
3
Introduction +
. I
C O L O NI A L P E R I O D
The Treaty of Tordesilhas + 1 5 The Letter of Pero Vaz de Caminha + 20 3· The Royal Letter Granting Powers in Brazil to Martim Afonso de Sousa t 29 4· The Founding of the First Settlements in Brazil t 3 1 5· The Royal Letters Granting Pernambuco t o Duarte Coelho t 33 1.
2.
LETTER O F
THE GRANT O F
PERNA�IBUCO CHARTER OF
6.
TO
THE C AP TAINCY O F
DUARTE
DUARTE CO ELHO
COELHO
34
45
Foreign Interlopers in Brazil + 5 0 THE
ENGLISH
TilE FRENCH
51 54
The Jesuits and the Indians t 56 8. The Rediscovery of the Amazon t 64 9· An Eyewitness Account of the First Battle of Gua rarapcs t 75 1 0. A Description of the Sugar Industry + 81 7·
x
+ Contents
11.
Vieira's Sermon Condemning Indian Slavery + 82
12.
The Discovery of Gold in Minas Gerais + 89
13.
An Example of a Colonial Land Grant + 92
14.
Accounts of the Tiete River: Highway to the Interior + 94
15.
A Bandeirante Epic: Over1and from Sao Paulo to Belem + 101
16.
Expansion to the South: New Roads and New Pas tures + 116
17.
The Treaty of Madrid + 121
18.
The Omnipresent Fear of Slave Rebellion + 127 SIXTEENTH-CENTURY SLAVE REVOLT WARNING OF A SLAVE REBELLION
127 128
PRECAUTIONS AGAINST NEGRO SLAVE REBELLIONS
129
19.
Pombal's Advice on How Best to Govern Brazil + 131
20.
The Secret Instructions of Viceroy Lavradio to His Successor + 137
21.
Observations on Life in Minas Gerais During the Gold Mining Era + 155
22.
Intellectual Achievements of Colonial Brazil + 164
164 THE POETRY OF GREGORIO DE MATTOS J OS E BASiLIO DA GAMA'S EPIC POEM 0 Uruguai 1 6 5 66 ROCHA PITTA's History of Portuguese America THE LITERARY SOCIETY OF RIO DE JANEIRO
2 3· 24.
1 170
The Sentence of Tiradentes + 178 The Economic Complaints of the Brazilians + 179 AZEREDO COUTINHO ON ECONOMIC REFORMS
1 79
COMPLAINTS OF THE MERCHANT CLASS OF BAHIA
1 83
25.
The Royal Order Opening the Ports + 186
26.
The Royal Order Revoking the Prohibition of Manu facturing + 188
27.
The Decree Elevating Brazil to a Kingdom t 189
28.
Instructions for the Guidance of the Prince Royal as Regent + 191
Contents :1:
XI
. II .
I MP E R I A L P E R I O D 29.
The Declaration of Brazilian Independence :1: 197
30.
Jose Bonifacio on Negro Slavery and Civilizing the Indians j: 200
31·
Statement of the Emperor on the Dissolution of the Constituent Assembly :1: 205
32·
The Constitution of 1824 :1: 211
33·
Portuguese Recognition of Brazilian Independ ence t 2I9
34·
The Abdication of Pedro I :1: 223 THE ABDICATION THE REACTION
35· 36.
223 224
Feij6 Outlines His Political Philosophy j: 2.28 Proclamation of the Majority of Pedro II :1: 2 30
37·
The Queir6z Law j: 231
38.
The Standard of Living of the Worker in the Northeast in the Mid-Nineteenth Century :1: 234
39·
The Problem of Large Landholdings in Pernambuco in the Mid-Nineteenth Century :1: 236
40.
The Treaty of the Triple Alliance :1: 2 39
41.
The Decree Opening the Amazon to International Traffic :1: 246
42.
The Republican Manifesto :1: 247
43·
Descriptions of Slave Markets t 251 CONDITIONS IN THE MARKET THE AUCTION
2 54
2 52
44·
The Law of the Free Womb :1: '257
45·
The Trial of the Bishop of Olinda :1: 263
46.
Mau:i Encourages Immigration and the Extension of Credit j: 266
47·
Witness to a Drought in the Northeast t 268
48.
The Social Classes in Rio de Janeiro during the Last Decade of the Empire :1: 274
49·
The Law Abolishing Slavery :1: 278
xii + Contents
. III .
R E P U B L I C A N PE R I O D 50.
The Proclamation Ending the Empire t 283
51.
The Abdication of Pedro II t 285
52.
The Decree Establishing the Republic :t 286
53·
The Decree Separating Church and State :t 288
54·
The Constitution of 1891 :t 290
55·
A Naval Proclamation Favoring the Monarchy t 301
56.
The Missions Award :t 304
57·
The Shift of Brazil's Diplomatic Axis: London to \Vashington :t 306
58.
The Intellectuals View the New Brazil :t 311 ' EUCLID ES D A CUNHA S
GRA