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Kingdom of Brazil

1815–1822 Kingdom of Brazil


1815–1822 Kingdom of Brazil

FieldValue
native_nameReino do Brasil
conventional_long_nameKingdom of Brazil
common_nameBrazil
statusConstituent kingdom of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves
year_start1815
flag_typeKingdom flag
date_start16 December
year_end1822
date_end7 September
life_span1815–1822
p1State of Brazil
flag_p1Coat of arms of Colonial Brazil.svg
border_p1no
s1Empire of Brazil
flag_s1Flag Regent Prince of Brazil.svg
image_flagFlag of the Kingdom of Brazil (1822).svg
flag_captionAbove: Flag of the Kingdom of Brazil. Below: Flag of the Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and Algarves.
image_flag2Flag of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves (1815-1825).svg
image_coatCoat of arms of the Kingdom of Brazil (1822).svg
image_mapMapa_do_Brasil_em_1817.png
common_languagesPortuguese
capitalRio de Janeiro
religionRoman Catholic
government_typeAbsolute monarchy
leader1Maria I
leader2João VI
year_leader11815–1816
year_leader21816–1822
title_leaderMonarch
deputy1John of Braganza
year_deputy11815–1816
deputy2Pedro of Braganza
year_deputy21821–1822
title_deputyPrince Regent
event_startEstablished
event1Pernambucan Revolt
date_event16 March 1817
event2Liberal Revolution
date_event224 August 1820
event3Return of the Royal Family to Portugal
date_event325 April 1821
event_endIndependence of Brazil
currencyReal
legislatureCortes (1820–1822)
stat_year11820
stat_pop14,000,000
demonymBrazilian

The Kingdom of Brazil () was a constituent kingdom of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves.

Creation

The legal entity of the Kingdom of Brazil was created by a law issued by Prince Regent John of Portugal, Prince of Brazil, Duke of Braganza, on behalf of his mother, Queen Maria I of Portugal, on 16 December 1815, which elevated the State of Brazil to the rank of a Kingdom within the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves.

By a decree issued on 22 April 1821 ahead of his departure from Brazil to Portugal, King John VI appointed his firstborn son and heir, Prince Pedro of Braganza, the Prince Royal of the United Kingdom, as Prince Regent of the Kingdom of Brazil, with delegated powers to discharge the "general government and entire administration of the Kingdom of Brazil" as the King's placeholder, thus granting the Kingdom of Brazil a devolved administration within the United Kingdom.

Dissolution

On 7 September 1822, Prince Pedro, Prince Royal of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, Regent of Brazil, declared the Brazilian Independence. On 12 October 1822, Prince Pedro became the first Emperor of the newly independent country, thus founding the Empire of Brazil. Brazil's independence was only recognized with the Treaty of Rio de Janeiro, in 1825, by which the Kingdom of Brazil, within the larger United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, was formally dissolved and Brazil's independence was recognized and granted by the Kingdom of Portugal.

On 8 September 1822, in the first day after the Proclamation of Independence, Prince Pedro issued a decree to adopt for the Kingdom of Brazil a new flag and coat of arms, replacing the Portuguese colours, then white and blue, with new colours, green and yellow (green was chosen for its association with the House of Braganza, Pedro's dynasty; yellow was chosen as it was the colour of the House of Habsburg, in which Pedro's wife, Leopoldina, was born; the new national colours therefore honoured the Royal couple that led Brazil at the foundation of its independence); those new symbols would later pass to the Empire of Brazil when it was founded on 12 October 1822. The new, post independence symbols, replaced the original flag of the Kingdom of Brazil (a golden armillary sphere on a blue field) and its original coat of arms (a golden armillary sphere with a blue background in the interior of the sphere), that had been designed in 1815. Of course, after independence, upon the adoption of the new flag and coat of arms on 8 September 1822, the coat of arms of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, adopted in 1815 (featuring a juxtaposition of the traditional coat of arms of Portugal and the Algarves with the original coat of arms of the Kingdom of Brazil in the background, surmounted by the royal crown), also ceased to be used.

As per one of the clauses of the Treaty of Rio de Janeiro, King John VI of Portugal and the Algarves, formerly King John VI of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, was granted the personal title of titular Emperor of Brazil, thus having stayed monarch of Brazil, in title, until his death in 1826.

References

References

  1. {{Cite Q. Q124350257
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