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Federative units of Brazil

The federative units of Brazil (Portuguese: unidades federativas do Brasil) are subnational entities with a certain degree of autonomy (self-government, self-regulation and self-collection) and endowed with their own government and constitution, which together form the Federative Republic of Brazil. There are 26 states (estados) and one federal district (distrito federal). The states are generally based on historical, conventional borders which have developed over time. The states are divided into municipalities, while the Federal District assumes the competences of both a state and a municipality.

Federative units of Brazil
Unidades federativas do Brasil
Map of modern federated units of Brazil
CategoryFederated state
LocationBrazil
Number26 states and 1 federal district
Populations636,707 (Roraima) – 44,411,238 (São Paulo)
Areas5,761 km2 (2,224 sq mi) (Federal District) – 1,559,168 km2 (601,998 sq mi) (Amazonas)
Government
Subdivisions

Government edit

The government of each state of Brazil is divided into executive, legislative and judiciary branches.

The state executive branch is headed by a state governor and includes a vice governor, both elected by the citizens of the state. The governor appoints several secretaries of state (each one in charge of a given portfolio) and the state attorney-general.[1]

The state legislative branch is the legislative assembly, a unicameral body composed of deputies elected by the citizens of the state.[1]

The judiciary in each of the states is composed of judges of law, who constitute the courts of first instance, and a Court of Justice, which is the court of second instance of the state and is composed of judges called desembargadores. Judges qualify through exams or are appointed.[1]

The states are divided into municipalities, which have different competences and are considered autonomous from the states. Municipalities have a mayor, vice mayor and a chamber of aldermen, all elected by the citizens of the municipality, but do not have a separate judiciary.[1]

The Federal District has the same executive, legislative and judiciary organization as a state, but it cannot be divided into municipalities, which is why its territory is composed of several administrative regions. These regions are directly managed by the government of the Federal District, which exercises constitutional and legal powers that are equivalent to those of the states, as well as those of the municipalities, thus simultaneously assuming all the obligations arising from them.[1]

Fernando de Noronha is not a municipality, but a state district of Pernambuco (the only state district in the country). It is governed by an administrator-general, appointed by the governor of Pernambuco, and a council whose members are elected by the citizens of the district.[2]

All states and the Federal District are represented in the national congress, each with three senators and between eight and 70 deputies, depending on their population. The citizens of all states and the Federal District vote for these national representatives and for president and vice president.

History edit

 
The States of Brazil, their respective flags, their state capitals, and their largest cities.

The present states of Brazil trace their history directly to the captaincies established by Portugal following the Treaty of Tordesillas which divided the World between Portugal and Spain.

The first administrative divisions of Brazil were the hereditary captaincies (capitanias hereditárias), stretches of land granted by the Portuguese Crown to noblemen or merchants with a charter to colonize the land. The first such captaincy was the island of São João, granted in 1504 to Fernão de Loronha. The continental land was divided into captaincies in 1534, generally following lines of latitude, although some followed meridians or diagonal lines.[3] Each of the holders of these captaincies was referred to as a captain donatary (capitão donatário). The captaincies were to be inherited by the holders' descendants, but the Crown retained the power to reacquire them.

In 1549, the Portuguese Crown appointed Tomé de Sousa as the first governor-general of the vast Portuguese dominion in South America, known as the State of Brazil (Estado do Brasil). In 1621, the northern part of the dominion was detached, becoming a separate entity known as the State of Maranhão. However, captaincies continued existing under both states as regional administrations.[4]

During the Iberian Union (1580–1640), which allowed Portuguese settlers to enter Spanish domains, the territory of Portuguese colonial domains in South America was more than doubled, with both states of Brazil and Maranhão greatly expanding westward. After the union ended, Portugal asserted its territorial claims, which Spain eventually accepted with the Treaty of Madrid in 1750. Several captaincies were created or merged during this period, in both the original and western domains, and some were returned to the Crown, becoming royal captaincies.[4]

The government of the Marquis of Pombal (1750–1777) significantly centralized the administration of the Portuguese colonies. By 1759, all captaincies had been returned to the Crown, with captains becoming appointed rather than recognized by inheritance. Some captaincies were designated as captaincies-general, to which other captaincies were subordinated.[4] In addition, the State of Grão-Pará and Rio Negro and the State of Maranhão and Piauí, which had been split from the State of Maranhão, were reincorporated into the State of Brazil in 1775, under a single governor-general. This centralization later helped to keep Brazil as a unified nation-state, avoiding fragmentation similar to that of the Spanish domains.

The captaincies became provinces in 1821, during the final years of the Kingdom of Brazil (united with Portugal), and maintained that designation after independence in 1822 under the Empire of Brazil. Most internal boundaries were kept unchanged from the end of the colonial period, generally following natural features such as rivers and mountain ridges. Some changes were made to suit domestic politics (transferring the Triângulo Mineiro from Goiás to Minas Gerais, transferring the south bank of the São Francisco River from Pernambuco to Minas Gerais and later to Bahia, separating the capital city of Rio de Janeiro as a Neutral Municipality outside any province, splitting Amazonas from Pará, and splitting Paraná from São Paulo), as well as international border adjustments resulting from diplomatic settlement of territorial disputes. The Cisplatine Province was annexed into Brazil in 1821, declared independence as Uruguay in 1825, and was recognized by the Treaty of Montevideo in 1828.

When Brazil became a republic in 1889, all provinces became states, and the Neutral Municipality became the Federal District. In 1903, Brazil acquired the territory of Acre from Bolivia with the Treaty of Petrópolis.

In 1942–1943, with the entrance of Brazil into World War II, the Vargas regime detached six strategic territories from the borders of the country to administer them directly: the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha (from Pernambuco), Amapá (from Pará), Rio Branco (from Amazonas), Guaporé (from Mato Grosso and Amazonas), Ponta Porã (from Mato Grosso) and Iguaçu (from Paraná and Santa Catarina).[5][6][7] Shortly after the war, the Brazilian constitution of 1946 returned Ponta Porã and Iguaçu to their original states.[8] Guaporé was renamed Rondônia in 1956,[9] and Rio Branco was renamed Roraima in 1962,[10] while remaining territories along with Amapá and Fernando de Noronha. Acre became a state in 1962.[11]

In 1960, the rectangular-shaped Distrito Federal was carved out of Goiás to contain the new capital, Brasília.[12][13] The previous federal district became the state of Guanabara,[8] but in 1975 it was reincorporated into its original state of Rio de Janeiro, becoming its capital as the city of Rio de Janeiro.[14]

In 1977, the southern part of Mato Grosso became the state of Mato Grosso do Sul.[15] In 1981, Rondônia became a state.[16] The Brazilian constitution of 1988 created the state of Tocantins from the northern portion of Goiás, established Amapá and Roraima as states, and returned the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha to Pernambuco.[1] The constitution thus ended all remaining territories, although it maintained the possibility of creating others in the future.

Proposed federative states edit

Proposed division of Pará edit

On 11 December 2011, a consultative referendum was held in the state of Pará about creating two new states from parts of it (Tapajós and Carajás, with the rest of the state remaining as Pará). Both proposals were rejected by about 66% of statewide voters, but reflecting a strong geographic split with over 90% approval by voters in the proposed breakaway regions and over 90% disapproval by those in the rest of the state.[17][18]

Maps edit

List edit

Flag and name Code Capital Largest city Area
(km2)[20]
Population
(May 2023)[21]
Density (per
km2, 2022)
GDP (R$
millions, 2022)
[22]
HDI
(2022)[23]
  Acre AC Rio Branco
164,123
830,018
6.34
21,000
0.719
  Alagoas AL Maceió
27,779
3,127,683
125.52
73,000
0.683
  Amapá AP Macapá
142,829
733,759
2.63
9000
0.740
  Amazonas AM Manaus
1,559,159
3,941,613
2.58
103,000
0.733
  Bahia BA Salvador
564,733
14,141,626
30.52
257,000
0.714
  Ceará CE Fortaleza
148,921
8,794,957
60.33
157,000
0.735
  Distrito Federal DF Brasília
5,780
2,817,381
493.00
249,000
0.850
  Espírito Santo ES Vitória Serra
46,096
3,833,712
80.63
125,000
0.772
  Goiás GO Goiânia
340,112
7,056,495
18.46
202,000
0.769
  Maranhão MA São Luís
331,937
6,776,699
19.03
102,000
0.687
  Mato Grosso MT Cuiabá
903,366
3,658,649
4.01
142,000
0.774
  Mato Grosso do Sul MS Campo Grande
357,146
2,880,308
7.83
107,000
0.766
  Minas Gerais MG Belo Horizonte
586,522
21,279,353
31.72
583,000
0.787
  Pará PA Belém
1,247,955
8,639,532
7.02
156,000
0.698
  Paraíba PB João Pessoa
56,470
4,175,326
78.93
60,000
0.722
  Paraná PR Curitiba
199,308
11,623,091
43.46
417,000
0.792
  Pernambuco PE Recife
98,148
9,645,321
103.83
201,000
0.727
  Piauí PI Teresina
251,578
3,341,352
9.73
26,000
0.697
  Rio de Janeiro RJ Rio de Janeiro
43,780
16,055,174
387.46
693,000
0.796
  Rio Grande do Norte RN Natal
52,811
3,619,619
62.74
76,000
0.731
  Rio Grande do Sul RS Porto Alegre
281,730
10,882,965
36.84
444,000
0.787
  Rondônia RO Porto Velho
237,591
1,837,905
7.34
19,000
0.725
  Roraima RR Boa Vista
224,301
708,352
2.54
8000
0.752
  Santa Catarina SC Florianópolis Joinville
95,736
7,218,704
69.74
293,000
0.808
  São Paulo SP São Paulo
248,223
44,411,238
175.73
1,964,000
0.826
  Sergipe SE Aracaju
21,915
2,403,563
97.64
38,000
0.702
  Tocantins TO Palmas
277,721
1,692,452
5.74
21,000
0.743

Other statistics, by: highest point, literacy rate, life expectancy, infant mortality, murder rate.

  1. ^ This map names the eastern captaincy of Maranhão as Piauí, and does not show the captaincy of the island of São João.
  2. ^ This anachronistic map shows the captaincy of São Paulo and Minas de Ouro from its foundation in 1709 to its first split in 1720, and the captaincies of Bahia and Pernambuco from the last merger with their surrounding captaincies in 1761 to their first following split in 1779. The captaincy of Rio Grande de São Pedro was subordinated to Rio de Janeiro from its foundation in 1760 to 1807. The captaincies of Maranhão and Grão-Pará remained unchanged during this whole period.
  3. ^ This map shows the entire future territory of Guaporé and state of Rondônia as part of Mato Grosso, but its northwest portion was part of Amazonas.[19]

Approximate correspondence between historical divisions edit

Approximate correspondence between divisions in selected years
Land of Brazil State of Maranhão
and Grão-Pará
State of Brazil Empire of Brazil United States of Brazil Federative Republic of Brazil
State of Brazil
1534 1654 1775 1822 1853 1889 1943 1967 1977 1988
captaincies captaincies
general
provinces provinces states
neutral
municipality
federal
district
federal district federal
district
territories
part of Tierra Firme
and New Castile
part of Peru part of Bolivia Acre Acre
Grão-Pará Grão-Pará Amazonas Amazonas
Rio Branco Roraima Roraima
Pará Pará
Amapá Amapá
Maranhão (west) Maranhão Maranhão Maranhão
Maranhão (east) Piauí
Ceará Ceará Pernambuco Ceará
Rio Grande Rio Grande do Norte
Itamaracá Paraíba Paraíba
São João Pernambuco Fernando de Noronha Pernambuco
Pernambuco Pernambuco
Alagoas
Baía de Todos os Santos Bahia Sergipe
Ilhéus Bahia
Porto Seguro
Espírito Santo Espírito Santo
São Tomé Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro
São Vicente (north) Município Neutro Distrito Federal Guanabara
São Vicente Minas Gerais
part of New Castile
and New Toledo
Goiás Goiás Tocantins
Goiás
Distrito Federal
Mato Grosso Guaporé Rondônia Rondônia
Mato Grosso Mato Grosso Mato Grosso
Ponta Porã Mato Grosso do Sul
Santo Amaro São Paulo São Paulo
São Vicente (south)
Paraná Paraná Paraná
Iguaçu
Santana Rio de Janeiro
(dependencies)
Santa Catarina Santa Catarina
Santa Catarina
part of New Andalusia part of Peru Rio Grande do Sul
part of Peru Cisplatina Uruguay

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Constitution of the Federative Republic of Brazil of 1988, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  2. ^ Law no. 11304, of 28 December 1995, Legislative Assembly of Pernambuco. (in Portuguese)
  3. ^ Reconstructing the map of the hereditary captaincies, Jorge Pimentel Cintra, Annals of the Museum of São Paulo, July/December 2013. (in Portuguese)
  4. ^ a b c The political-administrative organization and the regionalization process of the Brazilian colonial territory, Paulo Pedro Perides, Department of Geography Magazine, 7 November 2011. (in Portuguese)
  5. ^ Decree-law no. 4102, of 9 February 1942, Chamber of Deputies of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  6. ^ Decree-law no. 5812, of 13 September 1943, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  7. ^ Decree-law no. 6.550, of 31 May 1944, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  8. ^ a b Constitution of the United States of Brazil, of 18 September 1946, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  9. ^ Law no. 2731, of 17 February 1956, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  10. ^ Law no. 4182, of 13 December 1962, Chamber of Deputies of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  11. ^ Law no. 4070, of 15 June 1962, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  12. ^ Law no. 2874, of 19 September 1956, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  13. ^ Law no. 3273, of 1 October 1957, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)>
  14. ^ Complementary law no. 20, of 1 July 1974, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  15. ^ Complementary law no. 31, of 11 October 1977, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  16. ^ Complementary law no. 41, of 22 December 1981, Government of Brazil. (in Portuguese)
  17. ^ "Voters Reject Division of Brazilian State". Americas Quarterly. December 13, 2011.
  18. ^ In referendum, voters of Pará reject division of the state, G1, 11 December 2011. (in Portuguese)
  19. ^ Map of Brazil, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, November 1940. (in Portuguese)
  20. ^ Areas of the municipalities, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, 2018.
  21. ^ Population estimates, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, 2022.
  22. ^ Gross domestic product of municipalities, Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics, 2016.
  23. ^ "Ranking". Atlas of Human Development in Brazil. 15 November 2021.

External links edit

  • Economic statistical data for Brazil's 26 states and federal district (in English, Portuguese, and Spanish)
  • Federative units of Brazil at Curlie
  •   Wikimedia Atlas of Brazil
  • Map of Brazil, showing states and their standard time zones

federative, units, brazil, federative, units, brazil, portuguese, unidades, federativas, brasil, subnational, entities, with, certain, degree, autonomy, self, government, self, regulation, self, collection, endowed, with, their, government, constitution, which. The federative units of Brazil Portuguese unidades federativas do Brasil are subnational entities with a certain degree of autonomy self government self regulation and self collection and endowed with their own government and constitution which together form the Federative Republic of Brazil There are 26 states estados and one federal district distrito federal The states are generally based on historical conventional borders which have developed over time The states are divided into municipalities while the Federal District assumes the competences of both a state and a municipality Federative units of BrazilUnidades federativas do BrasilMap of modern federated units of BrazilCategoryFederated stateLocationBrazilNumber26 states and 1 federal districtPopulations636 707 Roraima 44 411 238 Sao Paulo Areas5 761 km2 2 224 sq mi Federal District 1 559 168 km2 601 998 sq mi Amazonas GovernmentState governmentSubdivisionsMunicipality Contents 1 Government 2 History 2 1 Proposed federative states 2 1 1 Proposed division of Para 2 2 Maps 3 List 3 1 Approximate correspondence between historical divisions 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksGovernment editThe government of each state of Brazil is divided into executive legislative and judiciary branches The state executive branch is headed by a state governor and includes a vice governor both elected by the citizens of the state The governor appoints several secretaries of state each one in charge of a given portfolio and the state attorney general 1 The state legislative branch is the legislative assembly a unicameral body composed of deputies elected by the citizens of the state 1 The judiciary in each of the states is composed of judges of law who constitute the courts of first instance and a Court of Justice which is the court of second instance of the state and is composed of judges called desembargadores Judges qualify through exams or are appointed 1 The states are divided into municipalities which have different competences and are considered autonomous from the states Municipalities have a mayor vice mayor and a chamber of aldermen all elected by the citizens of the municipality but do not have a separate judiciary 1 The Federal District has the same executive legislative and judiciary organization as a state but it cannot be divided into municipalities which is why its territory is composed of several administrative regions These regions are directly managed by the government of the Federal District which exercises constitutional and legal powers that are equivalent to those of the states as well as those of the municipalities thus simultaneously assuming all the obligations arising from them 1 Fernando de Noronha is not a municipality but a state district of Pernambuco the only state district in the country It is governed by an administrator general appointed by the governor of Pernambuco and a council whose members are elected by the citizens of the district 2 All states and the Federal District are represented in the national congress each with three senators and between eight and 70 deputies depending on their population The citizens of all states and the Federal District vote for these national representatives and for president and vice president History editSee also Captaincies of Brazil nbsp The States of Brazil their respective flags their state capitals and their largest cities The present states of Brazil trace their history directly to the captaincies established by Portugal following the Treaty of Tordesillas which divided the World between Portugal and Spain The first administrative divisions of Brazil were the hereditary captaincies capitanias hereditarias stretches of land granted by the Portuguese Crown to noblemen or merchants with a charter to colonize the land The first such captaincy was the island of Sao Joao granted in 1504 to Fernao de Loronha The continental land was divided into captaincies in 1534 generally following lines of latitude although some followed meridians or diagonal lines 3 Each of the holders of these captaincies was referred to as a captain donatary capitao donatario The captaincies were to be inherited by the holders descendants but the Crown retained the power to reacquire them In 1549 the Portuguese Crown appointed Tome de Sousa as the first governor general of the vast Portuguese dominion in South America known as the State of Brazil Estado do Brasil In 1621 the northern part of the dominion was detached becoming a separate entity known as the State of Maranhao However captaincies continued existing under both states as regional administrations 4 During the Iberian Union 1580 1640 which allowed Portuguese settlers to enter Spanish domains the territory of Portuguese colonial domains in South America was more than doubled with both states of Brazil and Maranhao greatly expanding westward After the union ended Portugal asserted its territorial claims which Spain eventually accepted with the Treaty of Madrid in 1750 Several captaincies were created or merged during this period in both the original and western domains and some were returned to the Crown becoming royal captaincies 4 The government of the Marquis of Pombal 1750 1777 significantly centralized the administration of the Portuguese colonies By 1759 all captaincies had been returned to the Crown with captains becoming appointed rather than recognized by inheritance Some captaincies were designated as captaincies general to which other captaincies were subordinated 4 In addition the State of Grao Para and Rio Negro and the State of Maranhao and Piaui which had been split from the State of Maranhao were reincorporated into the State of Brazil in 1775 under a single governor general This centralization later helped to keep Brazil as a unified nation state avoiding fragmentation similar to that of the Spanish domains The captaincies became provinces in 1821 during the final years of the Kingdom of Brazil united with Portugal and maintained that designation after independence in 1822 under the Empire of Brazil Most internal boundaries were kept unchanged from the end of the colonial period generally following natural features such as rivers and mountain ridges Some changes were made to suit domestic politics transferring the Triangulo Mineiro from Goias to Minas Gerais transferring the south bank of the Sao Francisco River from Pernambuco to Minas Gerais and later to Bahia separating the capital city of Rio de Janeiro as a Neutral Municipality outside any province splitting Amazonas from Para and splitting Parana from Sao Paulo as well as international border adjustments resulting from diplomatic settlement of territorial disputes The Cisplatine Province was annexed into Brazil in 1821 declared independence as Uruguay in 1825 and was recognized by the Treaty of Montevideo in 1828 When Brazil became a republic in 1889 all provinces became states and the Neutral Municipality became the Federal District In 1903 Brazil acquired the territory of Acre from Bolivia with the Treaty of Petropolis In 1942 1943 with the entrance of Brazil into World War II the Vargas regime detached six strategic territories from the borders of the country to administer them directly the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha from Pernambuco Amapa from Para Rio Branco from Amazonas Guapore from Mato Grosso and Amazonas Ponta Pora from Mato Grosso and Iguacu from Parana and Santa Catarina 5 6 7 Shortly after the war the Brazilian constitution of 1946 returned Ponta Pora and Iguacu to their original states 8 Guapore was renamed Rondonia in 1956 9 and Rio Branco was renamed Roraima in 1962 10 while remaining territories along with Amapa and Fernando de Noronha Acre became a state in 1962 11 In 1960 the rectangular shaped Distrito Federal was carved out of Goias to contain the new capital Brasilia 12 13 The previous federal district became the state of Guanabara 8 but in 1975 it was reincorporated into its original state of Rio de Janeiro becoming its capital as the city of Rio de Janeiro 14 In 1977 the southern part of Mato Grosso became the state of Mato Grosso do Sul 15 In 1981 Rondonia became a state 16 The Brazilian constitution of 1988 created the state of Tocantins from the northern portion of Goias established Amapa and Roraima as states and returned the archipelago of Fernando de Noronha to Pernambuco 1 The constitution thus ended all remaining territories although it maintained the possibility of creating others in the future Proposed federative states edit Main article Proposed federative units of Brazil Proposed division of Para edit Main article 2011 Para state division plebiscite On 11 December 2011 a consultative referendum was held in the state of Para about creating two new states from parts of it Tapajos and Carajas with the rest of the state remaining as Para Both proposals were rejected by about 66 of statewide voters but reflecting a strong geographic split with over 90 approval by voters in the proposed breakaway regions and over 90 disapproval by those in the rest of the state 17 18 Maps edit nbsp 1534Captaincies of Brazil a nbsp 1709 1720 1761 1779Expansion and mergers b nbsp 1822Imperial provinces nbsp 1889States at the start of the republic c nbsp 1943Border territories nbsp 1988Current statesList editFlag and name Code Capital Largest city Area km2 20 Population May 2023 21 Density perkm2 2022 GDP R millions 2022 22 HDI 2022 23 nbsp Acre AC Rio Branco 164 123 830 018 6 34 21 000 0 719 nbsp Alagoas AL Maceio 27 779 3 127 683 125 52 73 000 0 683 nbsp Amapa AP Macapa 142 829 733 759 2 63 9000 0 740 nbsp Amazonas AM Manaus 1 559 159 3 941 613 2 58 103 000 0 733 nbsp Bahia BA Salvador 564 733 14 141 626 30 52 257 000 0 714 nbsp Ceara CE Fortaleza 148 921 8 794 957 60 33 157 000 0 735 nbsp Distrito Federal DF Brasilia 5 780 2 817 381 493 00 249 000 0 850 nbsp Espirito Santo ES Vitoria Serra 46 096 3 833 712 80 63 125 000 0 772 nbsp Goias GO Goiania 340 112 7 056 495 18 46 202 000 0 769 nbsp Maranhao MA Sao Luis 331 937 6 776 699 19 03 102 000 0 687 nbsp Mato Grosso MT Cuiaba 903 366 3 658 649 4 01 142 000 0 774 nbsp Mato Grosso do Sul MS Campo Grande 357 146 2 880 308 7 83 107 000 0 766 nbsp Minas Gerais MG Belo Horizonte 586 522 21 279 353 31 72 583 000 0 787 nbsp Para PA Belem 1 247 955 8 639 532 7 02 156 000 0 698 nbsp Paraiba PB Joao Pessoa 56 470 4 175 326 78 93 60 000 0 722 nbsp Parana PR Curitiba 199 308 11 623 091 43 46 417 000 0 792 nbsp Pernambuco PE Recife 98 148 9 645 321 103 83 201 000 0 727 nbsp Piaui PI Teresina 251 578 3 341 352 9 73 26 000 0 697 nbsp Rio de Janeiro RJ Rio de Janeiro 43 780 16 055 174 387 46 693 000 0 796 nbsp Rio Grande do Norte RN Natal 52 811 3 619 619 62 74 76 000 0 731 nbsp Rio Grande do Sul RS Porto Alegre 281 730 10 882 965 36 84 444 000 0 787 nbsp Rondonia RO Porto Velho 237 591 1 837 905 7 34 19 000 0 725 nbsp Roraima RR Boa Vista 224 301 708 352 2 54 8000 0 752 nbsp Santa Catarina SC Florianopolis Joinville 95 736 7 218 704 69 74 293 000 0 808 nbsp Sao Paulo SP Sao Paulo 248 223 44 411 238 175 73 1 964 000 0 826 nbsp Sergipe SE Aracaju 21 915 2 403 563 97 64 38 000 0 702 nbsp Tocantins TO Palmas 277 721 1 692 452 5 74 21 000 0 743Other statistics by highest point literacy rate life expectancy infant mortality murder rate This map names the eastern captaincy of Maranhao as Piaui and does not show the captaincy of the island of Sao Joao This anachronistic map shows the captaincy of Sao Paulo and Minas de Ouro from its foundation in 1709 to its first split in 1720 and the captaincies of Bahia and Pernambuco from the last merger with their surrounding captaincies in 1761 to their first following split in 1779 The captaincy of Rio Grande de Sao Pedro was subordinated to Rio de Janeiro from its foundation in 1760 to 1807 The captaincies of Maranhao and Grao Para remained unchanged during this whole period This map shows the entire future territory of Guapore and state of Rondonia as part of Mato Grosso but its northwest portion was part of Amazonas 19 Approximate correspondence between historical divisions edit Approximate correspondence between divisions in selected years Land of Brazil State of Maranhaoand Grao Para State of Brazil Empire of Brazil United States of Brazil Federative Republic of BrazilState of Brazil1534 1654 1775 1822 1853 1889 1943 1967 1977 1988captaincies captainciesgeneral provinces provinces statesneutralmunicipality federaldistrict federal district federaldistrictterritoriespart of Tierra Firmeand New Castile part of Peru part of Bolivia Acre AcreGrao Para Grao Para Amazonas AmazonasRio Branco Roraima RoraimaPara ParaAmapa AmapaMaranhao west Maranhao Maranhao MaranhaoMaranhao east PiauiCeara Ceara Pernambuco CearaRio Grande Rio Grande do NorteItamaraca Paraiba ParaibaSao Joao Pernambuco Fernando de Noronha PernambucoPernambuco PernambucoAlagoasBaia de Todos os Santos Bahia SergipeIlheus BahiaPorto SeguroEspirito Santo Espirito SantoSao Tome Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro Rio de JaneiroSao Vicente north Municipio Neutro Distrito Federal GuanabaraSao Vicente Minas Geraispart of New Castileand New Toledo Goias Goias TocantinsGoiasDistrito FederalMato Grosso Guapore Rondonia RondoniaMato Grosso Mato Grosso Mato GrossoPonta Pora Mato Grosso do SulSanto Amaro Sao Paulo Sao PauloSao Vicente south Parana Parana ParanaIguacuSantana Rio de Janeiro dependencies Santa Catarina Santa CatarinaSanta Catarinapart of New Andalusia part of Peru Rio Grande do Sulpart of Peru Cisplatina UruguaySee also edit nbsp Brazil portalBrazil socio geographic division List of Brazilian states by Human Development Index List of Brazilian states by murder rate List of Brazil state name etymologies Provinces of Brazil Regions of BrazilReferences edit a b c d e f Constitution of the Federative Republic of Brazil of 1988 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 11304 of 28 December 1995 Legislative Assembly of Pernambuco in Portuguese Reconstructing the map of the hereditary captaincies Jorge Pimentel Cintra Annals of the Museum of Sao Paulo July December 2013 in Portuguese a b c The political administrative organization and the regionalization process of the Brazilian colonial territory Paulo Pedro Perides Department of Geography Magazine 7 November 2011 in Portuguese Decree law no 4102 of 9 February 1942 Chamber of Deputies of Brazil in Portuguese Decree law no 5812 of 13 September 1943 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Decree law no 6 550 of 31 May 1944 Government of Brazil in Portuguese a b Constitution of the United States of Brazil of 18 September 1946 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 2731 of 17 February 1956 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 4182 of 13 December 1962 Chamber of Deputies of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 4070 of 15 June 1962 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 2874 of 19 September 1956 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Law no 3273 of 1 October 1957 Government of Brazil in Portuguese gt Complementary law no 20 of 1 July 1974 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Complementary law no 31 of 11 October 1977 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Complementary law no 41 of 22 December 1981 Government of Brazil in Portuguese Voters Reject Division of Brazilian State Americas Quarterly December 13 2011 In referendum voters of Para reject division of the state G1 11 December 2011 in Portuguese Map of Brazil Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics November 1940 in Portuguese Areas of the municipalities Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 2018 Population estimates Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 2022 Gross domestic product of municipalities Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 2016 Ranking Atlas of Human Development in Brazil 15 November 2021 External links editEconomic statistical data for Brazil s 26 states and federal district in English Portuguese and Spanish Federative units of Brazil at Curlie nbsp Wikimedia Atlas of Brazil Map of Brazil showing states and their standard time zones Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federative units of Brazil amp oldid 1206035854, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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