Conquista do Pará explained

Conventional Long Name:Conquista do Pará
Common Name:Amazonas Empire
Native Name:Império do Amazonas
Capital:Salvador
Religion:Catholicism
Government Type:Monarchy
Common Languages:Portuguese, Indigenous languages, African languages, Nheengatu
Title Leader:King
Leader1:Manuel I of Portugal
Event1:Conquest of the mouth of the Amazon River
Date Event1:1615
Event2:Foundation
Date Event2:1615
Event3:Creation of the Captaincy of Grão-Pará and the State of Maranhão
Date Event3:1621
Today:Brazil

Conquista do Pará (region initially called pa'ra, from Tupi-Guarani: "river-sea"), also called the Império das Amazonas (in English: Amazonas Empire), now the Brazilian state of Pará, was an indigenous territory transformed into Portuguese colonial territory in 1615 by the military man and nobleman, at the beginning of the colonization of the Amazon and conquest of the Amazon River.[1] It was located in the then Captaincy of Maranhão (1534-1621).[2] [3]

The Captaincy of Maranhão had 75 leagues of coastline, extending from the Bay of All Saints to the mouth of the da Cruz River, covering the northeastern area of the current state of Maranhão, the eastern region of the Conquista do Pará (where Belém is today), and the island of Marajó.[4]

In 1621, the Conquista do Pará was transformed into the Captaincy of Grão Pará and the State of Maranhão, consolidating Portuguese rule in the Amazon.[5] [6]

History

In 1534, the Captaincy of Maranhão was created along with 13 other hereditary captaincies,[7] in the colonial period of Portuguese America, combining feudal and capitalist elements; a system that had been used successfully in the development of the islands of Madeira and Azores.[8]

In 1572, the Portuguese Crown, still perceiving flaws in colonial administration, divided Portuguese America into two general governments (from 1572 to 1577):[9] Government of the North (with Salvador as capital) which had administrative dominion over the future Conquista do Pará (1615); and the Government of the South, with its capital in Rio de Janeiro.[10] [11]

In 1615, the military man and nobleman Alexandre de Moura began the protection and colonization of the Amazon region, conquering the mouth of the Amazon River and transforming the indigenous region in the far north called Mairi (home to the Tupinambá and Pacajá Indians under the command of cacique Guaimiaba), into the Portuguese colonial territory Conquista do Pará or Império das Amazonas ("Amazonas Empire") (1615–1621), located in the then Captaincy of Maranhão (1534–1621).

In 1616, in an attempt to secure dominance in eastern Amazon and protect the region from the Dutch and British in search of spices (the drogas do sertão),[12] [13] the Portuguese, at the behest of the King of the Iberian Union/Philippine Dynasty, Manuel I, held the military expedition Feliz Lusitânia. It was commanded by Captain Francisco Caldeira Castelo Branco and founded the Conquista do Pará near the Piry creek on January 12, 1616,[14] [15] [16] starting the colonial settlement named after the military expedition (present-day city of Belém).[17] [18]

In 1621, Conquista do Pará was transformed into the Captaincy of Grão Pará and the State of Maranhão (1621–1775).

References

  1. Web site: Capitania do Grão-Pará . https://web.archive.org/web/20221103191136/http://lhs.unb.br/atlas/Capitania_do_Gr%C3%A3o-Par%C3%A1 . 3 November 2022 . 27 December 2017 . Atlas Digital da América Lusa. Laboratório de História Social (LHS) da Universidade de Brasília (UNB) . pt.
  2. Web site: 2019 . PROJETO PEDAGÓGICO INSTITUCIONAL 2019 - 2023 . 26 January 2022 . Faculdade Metropolitana do Pará - FAMETRO . pt . 26 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220126194403/https://para.fametro.edu.br/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/par-ppi-revisado-19.12.20-ok.pdf . dead .
  3. Book: de Lacerda, Joaquim Maria . Pequena História do Brasil . Bertrand . 1911 . pt.
  4. Book: Koogan . Enciclopédia e Dicionário Ilustrado . Houaiss . Edições Delta . 1993 . 2044 . pt.
  5. Web site: 2012 . Brasil, Pará, Belém, História . 8 March 2018 . Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística . pt.
  6. Pereira . Carlos Simões . 28 October 2020 . Das origens da Belém seiscentista e sua herança Tupinambá . Revista Científica Multidisciplinar Núcleo do Conhecimento . 10 . 146–160 . 10.32749/nucleodoconhecimento.com.br/historia/heranca-tupinamba . 228931228 . 2448-0959. free .
  7. Web site: O Sistema de Capitanias Hereditárias . 18 January 2017 . Portal MultiRio . pt.
  8. Book: Boxer, Charles, R. . O Império Marítimo Português . Companhia das Letras . 2003 . 101 . pt.
  9. Book: Capitais brasileiras : dados históricos, demográficos, culturais e midiáticos . 2016 . Celsi Brönstrup Silvestrin, Gisele Noll, Nilda Jacks . 978-85-473-0291-7 . 1a edição . Curitiba, PR . 1003295058.
  10. Web site: Governo-Geral: resumo, contexto, características . 27 January 2022 . Mundo Educação . pt-br.
  11. Web site: Reficio . 22 February 2022 . reficio.cloud . pt.
  12. Web site: Pacievitch . Thais . História do Pará - História . 11 August 2013 . InfoEscola . pt-BR.
  13. Itamaraty Ministério das Relações exteriores . 1997 . O Estado do Pará . Revista Textos do Brasil . 1 . 2.
  14. Web site: Coimbra . Oswaldo . Neto . Alfredo Jorge Hesse Garcia . 2008 . Cidade velha, cidade viva . Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPA) . pt.
  15. Web site: Açaí, jambu e a Amazônia: 10 curiosidades sobre o Pará . 7 March 2018 . bol.uol.com.br . pt-br.
  16. Web site: 2022-01-07 . I DECLARAÇÃO AOS POVOS SOBRE O TERRITÓRIO MURUCUTU TUPINAMBÁ . 7 January 2022 . Idade Mídi@ . pt-BR.
  17. Tavares . Maria Goretti da Costa . 2008 . A Formação Territorial do Espaço Paraense . Revista ACTA Geográfica nº 3 - Ano II . Universidade Federal do Pará (UFPa) . 10.5654/actageo2008.0103.0005 . 1980-5772.
  18. Web site: PA . Do G1 . 2016-01-09 . Veja como foi a fundação de Belém em 1616 e conheça sua história . 4 May 2016 . Belém 400 anos . pt-br.
Preceded by:

Pa'ra Indian Region

1621

History of Pará

Conquista do Pará

Império das Amazonas

1615 – 1621

Succeeded by:

Captaincy of Grão Pará

1621–1822