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8 - The Portuguese settlement of Brazil, 1500–80

from PART TWO - EUROPE AND AMERICA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

H. B. Johnson
Affiliation:
Scholar in Residence, University of Virginia
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Summary

Late medieval Europe had long been linked with Asia via tenuous land routes, as had Asia with America across the Pacific, but it was not until the Portuguese thrust into the Atlantic early in the fifteenth century that the last great oceanic hiatus in global intercommunication came to be closed. Paradoxically, this first stirring of what was to become modern European imperialism emerged from a society in contraction. Portugal, like the rest of Europe, had suffered a severe population decline in the middle years of the fourteenth century; the ensuing abandonment of marginal land along with the depopulation of towns and villages had created a classic ‘feudal crisis’ with the upper strata of society economically squeezed by the loss of much of their customary revenue. Elsewhere in Europe this pinch had the effect of sending forth members of the nobility on marauding expeditions in search of booty and new sources of income; the Portuguese conquest of the Moroccan seaport of Ceuta in 1415 (the same year as Henry V's victory at Agincourt) may well be viewed in this light. But Ceuta and the accompanying vision of a North African empire that it suggested turned out to be a dead end. It proved impossible to renew the peninsular reconquest in Morocco: the Berber population was too resistant, too deeply attached to its Islamic beliefs; Portugal's population was too small, its military resources too few.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1984

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References

Barros, João, Asia, primeira decada, ed. Baião, António (Coimbra, 1932).
Carneiro, F., ‘Relação de todas as rendas da coroa deste reyno de Portugal que nelle se arracadão de que procedem, modo, e lugar em que se pagão’, ed. Luz, F. Mendes, Boletim da Bibliotcca da Universida de Coimbra (1949).Google Scholar
Días, Carlos Malheiro, ‘A Expedição de 1501–02’, in História da colonização Portuguésa no Brasil, ed. Días, C. Malheiro (Porto, 1924), II.Google Scholar
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Godinho, V. M., Ensaios II (Lisbon, 1958).
Guedes, Max Justo, ‘As primeiras expedições portuguesas e o reconhecimento da costa brasileira’, Revista Portuguesa de História, 12/2 (1968).Google Scholar
Johnson, H. B., ‘The donatary captaincy in historical perspective: Portuguese backgrounds to the settlement of Brazil’, Hispanic American Historical Review, 52 (1972).Google Scholar
Marchant, Alexander, From barter to slapery (Baltimore, 1942).
Morison, Samuel Eliot, The European discovery of America: the southern voyages, 1492–1616 (New York, 1974).
Ribeiro, Orlando, Aspectos e problemas da expansão Portugusa (Lisbon, 1955).
Trías, Rolando A. Laguarda, ‘Christóvão Jaques e as armadas Guarda-Costa’, in História Naval Brasileira, ed. Guedes, M. J. (Rio de Janeiro, 1975), I/I.Google Scholar
Witte, Charles-Mártial, Les Bulles pontificales et l'expansion portugaise au XVe siècle (Louvain, 1958), passim.

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