The growth of
Portuguese interests in the Americas was slow, the king
being absorbed with establishing Portuguese hegemony in
Asia. In addition, the Treaty of Tordesillas of 1494,
arranged by Pope Alexander VI, divided the unexplored world
between Spain and Portugal and forbade Portugal from
exploring beyond a meridian drawn 1,600 kilometers miles
west of the Cape Verde Islands. In 1502 Fernão
Noronha was given a three-year commercial monopoly on
dyewood in return for exploring 300 leagues (about 1,500
kilometers) of the Brazilian coast each year. During the
last years of Manuel I's reign, the first colonists were
sent to Brazil to establish a sugar industry. Additional
colonists were sent during the reign of João III,
and, in 1530, Martim Afonso de Sousa was named major captain
of Brazil and invested with the power to distribute land
among captains or donatários, much as had
been done in Madeira when it was colonized a century before.
These captaincies were large strips of land that extended
from the coast into the interior. The captains settled
colonists in their respective captaincies and were required
to provide them protection and justice. As the captaincies
were independent of one another, they were unable to defend
themselves from foreign pirates. Consequently, João
III appointed a governor general with authority over the
captaincies. The first governor general, Tomé de
Sousa, was appointed in 1549 and established his capital at
São Salvador da Baía. He defeated French
pirates in a naval engagement in the bay of Rio de Janeiro.
Intensified colonization under de Sousa began in the form of
coastal settlements and spread to the interior. The
colonists cultivated indigenous crops, especially manioc,
and introduced new ones such as wheat, rice, grapes,
oranges, and sugarcane from Madeira and São
Tomé. Sugar soon became Brazil's most important
export.
Library of Congress Country StudyColonization of
Brazil
Library of Congress Country Study
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