Having lost the
empire in Asia, Portugal's policy makers turned their
attention to Brazil, where they intensified the cultivation
of sugar, cotton, and spices. This expansion of agriculture
required a great deal of labor, which led to the importation
of slaves from Angola and Guinea. Amerindians were saved
from this fate by the Jesuits, who protected them from
enslavement. The southern part
of Brazil was occupied first, and the north, later, owing to
resistance put up by Amerindians allied with French pirates.
In 1580 the Portuguese conquered Paraíba, and, later,
Sergipe. In 1603 they penetrated to Ceará and, later,
to Pará, where they founded the city of Belém.
In 1637 Pedro Teixeira launched a daring expedition into the
Amazon Basin, following the river to its headwaters near the
Pacific coast. During the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, various expeditions were sent into the interior,
especially at the end of the seventeenth century when gold
was discovered. These expeditions
were made up of adventurers known as bandeirantes (after the
Portuguese word for flag) because they traveled under the
flag of their leader, who took with him kin, friends,
slaves, and friendly Amerindians. These expeditions, which
followed rivers into the interior, lasted years. The most
notable bandeirantes were Pais Leme, who traveled for seven
years throughout present-day Minas Gerais, and his
son-in-law, Manuel Borba Gato, who discovered several
sources of gold on the Rio das Velhas. In addition to gold,
diamonds were also found in abundance. The discovery of gold
and diamonds sparked a gold rush from all over the world to
Brazil and from the central zones to the interior, which
devastated Brazilian agriculture. The gold and diamonds
enriched the Portuguese crown and allowed it to spend
lavishly on imported goods and baroque palaces, thus
destroying once again the initiatives previously taken for
indigenous economic development. Brazilian gold
also encouraged England to update its commercial relations
with Portugal. The Methuen Treaty of 1703 allowed the
Portuguese a preferential duty on wine exported to England,
in return for which Portugal removed restrictions on the
importation of English-made goods. The Portuguese market was
soon absorbing 10 percent of the English export trade, which
represented an increase of 120 percent above the quantity of
goods imported to Portugal before the treaty. Portuguese
exports to England, mainly wine, rose by less than 40
percent. Gold from Brazil was used to pay for this trade
imbalance. Restoration
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Library of Congress Country StudyDevelopment of
Brazil
Library of Congress Country Study
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