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Rio Grande do Sul

Rio Grande do Sul (UK: /ˌr ˌɡrændi d ˈsʊl/,[3] US: /- ˌɡrɑːndi d ˈsl/,[4] Portuguese: [ˈʁi.u ˈɡɾɐ̃dʒ(i) du ˈsuw] (listen);[a] lit. "Great River of the South") is a state in the southern region of Brazil. It is the fifth-most-populous state and the ninth largest by area. Located in the southernmost part of the country, Rio Grande do Sul is bordered clockwise by Santa Catarina to the north and northeast, the Atlantic Ocean to the east, the Uruguayan departments of Rocha, Treinta y Tres, Cerro Largo, Rivera and Artigas to the south and southwest, and the Argentine provinces of Corrientes and Misiones to the west and northwest. The capital and largest city is Porto Alegre. The state has the highest life expectancy in Brazil, and the crime rate is relatively low compared to the Brazilian national average.[5] Despite the high standard of living, unemployment is still high in the state, as of 2017.[6] The state has 5.4% of the Brazilian population and it is responsible for 6.6% of the Brazilian GDP.

Rio Grande do Sul
State of Rio Grande do Sul
Motto(s): 
"Liberdade, Igualdade, Humanidade" (Portuguese)
"Liberty, Equality, Humanity"
Anthem: Hino Rio-Grandense
Map of Brazil with Rio Grande do Sul highlighted
Coordinates: 30°S 53°W / 30°S 53°W / -30; -53Coordinates: 30°S 53°W / 30°S 53°W / -30; -53
Country Brazil
Capital and Largest city Porto Alegre
Government
 • GovernorEduardo Leite (PSDB)
 • Vice GovernorGabriel Souza (MDB)
 • SenatorsLasier Martins (PODE)
Luis Carlos Heinze (PP)
Paulo Paim (PT)
Area
 • Total281,707.149 km2 (108,767.738 sq mi)
 • Rank9th
Population
 (2020)[1]
 • Total11,422,973
 • Rank6th
 • Density41/km2 (110/sq mi)
  • Rank13th
Demonym(s)Rio-grandense, sul-rio-grandense or gaúcho
GDP
 • Year2015
 • TotalUS$205 billion (PPP) US$115 billion (nominal) (4th)
 • Per capitaUS$18,131 (PPP) US$10,244 (nominal) (5th)
HDI
 • Year2017
 • Category0.787[2]high (6th)
Time zoneUTC-3 (BRT)
Postal code
90000-000 to 99990-000
ISO 3166 codeBR-RS
License Plate Letter SequenceIAQ to JDO
Websiters.gov.br

The state shares a gaucho culture with its neighbors Argentina and Uruguay. Before the arrival of Portuguese and Spanish settlers, it was inhabited mostly by the Guarani and Kaingang peoples (with smaller populations of Charrúa and Minuane). The first Europeans there were Jesuits, followed by settlers from the Azores. In the 19th century it was the scene of conflicts including the Ragamuffin War and the Paraguayan War. Large waves of German and Italian migration have shaped the state as well.

Geography

 
Map with municipal boundaries

Rio Grande do Sul is bordered to the northeast by the Brazilian State of Santa Catarina, to the southeast by the Atlantic Ocean, on the southwest by Uruguay, and to the northwest by the Argentine provinces of Corrientes and Misiones.

The northern part of the state lies on the southern slopes of the elevated plateau extending southward from São Paulo across the states of Paraná and Santa Catarina, and is much broken by low mountain ranges whose general direction across the trend of the slope gives them the appearance of escarpments. A range of low mountains extends southward from the Serra do Mar of Santa Catarina and crosses the state into Uruguay. West of this range is a vast grassy plain devoted principally to stock-raising – the northern and most elevated part being suitable in pasturage and climate for sheep, and the southern for cattle. East of it is a wide coastal zone only slightly elevated above the sea; within it are two great estuarine lagoons, the Lagoa dos Patos and Lagoa Mirim, which are separated from the ocean by two sandy, partially barren peninsulas. The coast is one great sand beach, broken only by the outlet of the two lakes, called the Rio Grande, which affords an entrance to navigable inland waters and several ports. There are two distinct river systems in Rio Grande do Sul – that of the eastern slope draining to the lagoons, and that of the Río de la Plata basin draining westward to the Uruguay River.[7]

 
Araucaria in the Mountains Region of Rio Grande do Sul

The larger rivers of the eastern group are the Jacuí, Sinos, Caí, Gravataí and Camaquã, which flow into the Lagoa dos Patos, and the Jaguarão which flows into the Lagoa Mirim. All of the first named, except the Camaquã, discharge into one of the two arms or estuaries opening into the northern end of Lagoa dos Patos, which is called the Guaíba River, though technically it is not a river but a lake. The Guaíba River is broad, comparatively deep and about 56 kilometres (35 mi) long, and with the rivers discharging into it affords upwards of 320 kilometres (200 mi) of fluvial navigation. The Jacuí is one of the most important rivers of the state, rising in the ranges of the Coxilha Grande of the north and flowing south and southeast to the Guaíba estuary, with a course of nearly 480 kilometres (300 mi) It has two large tributaries, the Vacacaí from the south and the Taquari from the north, and many small streams. The Jaguarão, which forms part of the boundary line with Uruguay, is navigable 42 km up to and beyond the town of Jaguarão.[7]

 
Yacumã Falls in the Turvo State Park are the second widest in the world.

In addition to the Lagoa dos Patos and Lagoa Mirim there are a number of small lakes on the sandy, swampy peninsulas that lie between the coast and these two, and there are others of a similar character along the northern coast. The largest lake is the Lagoa dos Patos (Lake of the Patos – an Indian tribe inhabiting its shores at the time of European discovery), which lies parallel with the coastline, northeast and southwest, and is about 214 kilometres (133 mi) long exclusive of the two arms at its northern end, 40 58 km long respectively, and of its outlet, the Rio Grande, about 39 km long. Its width varies from 35 to 58 km. The lake is comparatively shallow and filled with sand banks, making its navigable channels tortuous and difficult. The Lagoa Mirim occupies a similar position farther south, on the Uruguayan border, and is about 175 kilometres (109 mi) long by 10 to 35 km wide. It is more irregular in outline and discharges into Lagoa dos Patos through a navigable channel known as the São Gonçalo Channel. A part of the lake lies in Uruguayan territory, but its navigation, as determined by treaty, belongs exclusively to Brazil. Both of these lakes are evidently the remains of an ancient depression in the coastline shut in by sand beaches built up by the combined action of wind and current. They are of the same level as the ocean, but their waters are affected by the tides and are brackish only a short distance above the Rio Grande outlet.[7]

Fully one-third of the state belongs to the Río de la Plata drainage basin. Of the many streams flowing northward and westward to the Uruguay, the largest are the Ijuí of the plateau region, the Ibicuí, which has its source near Santa Maria in the central part of the state and flows westward to the Uruguay a short distance above Uruguaiana, and the Quaraí River which forms part of the boundary line with Uruguay. The Uruguay River itself is formed by the confluence of the Canoas and Pelotas rivers. The Pelotas, which has its source in the Serra do Mar on the Atlantic coast, and the Uruguay River forms the northern and western boundary line of the state down to the mouth of the Quaraí, on the Uruguayan frontier.[7]

Climate

 
Pico do Monte Negro is the highest mountain in the state.
 
Canyon Fortaleza at the Aparados da Serra National Park.
 
Snow in Caxias do Sul.

Rio Grande do Sul lies within the south temperate zone and is predominantly humid subtropical (Cfa, according to the Köppen climate classification). The climate is subtropical highland (Cfb) in the highest areas. There are four relatively well-defined seasons and rainfall is well distributed throughout the year, but occasional droughts can occur. The winter months, June to September, are characterized by heavy rains and by a cold southwesterly wind, called minuano, which sometimes lowers the temperature to below freezing, especially in the mountainous municipalities,[7] where snowfalls can occur. The lowest official temperature registered in the state was −9.8 °C (14 °F) in Bom Jesus, on August 1, 1955.[8] In summer, the temperature rises to 37 °C (99 °F), and heat related injuries are not uncommon.

Ecoregions

Several ecoregions cover portions of the state. In the northeastern corner of the state, between the Serra do Mar/Serra Geral and the Atlantic, lies the southern extension of the Serra do Mar coastal forests, a belt of evergreen tropical moist forests that extend north along the coastal strip as far as Rio de Janeiro state. The high plateau behind the Serra do Mar is occupied by the Araucaria moist forests, a subtropical forests characterized by evergreen, laurel-leaved forests interspersed with emergent Brazilian Pines (Araucaria angustifolia). The Alto Paraná Atlantic forests lie on the lower slopes of the plateau south and east of the Araucaria forests, including much of the lower basin of the Jacuí and its tributaries. These forests are semi-deciduous, with many trees losing their leaves in the winter dry season. The Atlantic Coast restingas, distinctive forests which grow on nutrient-poor coastal dunes, extend along the coast, as far as the Uruguayan border.

The southeastern portion of the state is covered by the Pampas, which extends south into Uruguay, in a plateau named Serras de Sudeste (Southeastern Mountain Ranges).

History

During the Brazilian Colonial period, the province of South Rio Grande was the scene of small wars and border skirmishes between Portugal and Spain for the region, the Sacramento Colony, and the Guarani Missions. It was also a focal point for internal rebellions in the 19th and the early 20th centuries.

Guarani Wars

According to the treaty of Tordesillas, the region was to be part of the Spanish possessions in South America. However, the Spanish were much more interested in the Pacific Coast, where gold, silver, and gems were quickly found. Even in the Atlantic coast, their attention was on the River Plate where they built the seaport of Buenos Aires, on its right bank. Consequently, Spanish settlement followed the course of the River Plate and its tributaries, especially the Paraná and Uruguay rivers, largely ignoring the Rio Grande do Sul area. The Spanish introduced livestock which escaped into the plains and attracted gauchos to the area.

The first Spanish to settle in the region that is now Paraguay, northwestern Argentina (Corrientes, Misiones), and Rio Grande do Sul were Jesuit missionary priests who came with the idea of converting the indigenous population to Catholic Christianity. To that end, they founded missionary villages known in Spanish as misiones or reducciones, populated by Guarani Indians.

In the early 17th century, the Jesuits founded missions to the east of the Uruguay river, and in the northwest of modern Rio Grande do Sul.[9]

 
The historic town of São Miguel das Missões

The missions were destroyed and their Guarani inhabitants were enslaved in large raids by bandeirantes between 1636 and 1638; however, in 1687, the Jesuits were back in the region, having refounded seven reductions, the Misiones Orientales. The region remained under Spanish sovereignty, though in practice the Jesuits operated quite independently as consequence of the spanish laws, up to the late 17th century. But in 1680, the Portuguese founded Colônia do Sacramento on the northern bank of the River Plate, in what is now Uruguay. War ensued and was intermittent until the independence of Uruguay in 1828.[10]

The logistics of defending Colônia against the Spanish resulted in a government effort to settle Rio Grande do Sul's coastal region with Brazilian and Portuguese colonists. In 1737, a fortified village (today the city of Rio Grande) was built at the entrance of Lagoa dos Patos. In 1752, a group of Azorean settlers founded Porto Alegre; to the west, Rio Pardo was also founded. Towards the middle of the century, Brazilians and Portuguese arrived to the west of the region, clashing with the Jesuits and the Guaranis. Up to 1756, the Guaranis fought back, under the leadership of Sepé Tiaraju, who was popularly canonized as São Sepé (Saint Sepé). However, the Portuguese and Brazilians eventually crushed the resistance, destroyed the missions, and the region came definitely into Portuguese hegemony.[11]

In 1738 the territory (which included the present state of Santa Catarina) became the Capitania d'el Rei and was made a dependency of Rio de Janeiro. Territorial disputes between Spain and Portugal led to the occupation by the Spaniards of the town of Rio Grande (then the capital of the capitania) and neighboring districts from 1763 to 1776, when they reverted to the Portuguese. The capture of Rio Grande in 1763 caused the removal of the seat of government to Viamão at the head of Lagoa dos Patos; in 1773 Porto dos Cazaes, renamed Porto Alegre, became the capital. These historic acts were planned and directed by Manuel Sepúlveda, who used the fictitious name or pseudonym José Marcelino de Figueiredo, to hide his identity. In 1801 news of war between Spain and Portugal led to the capture of the Sete Povos and some frontier posts.

In 1777, the Santo Ildefonso Treaty granted the coastal region to Portugal, and the Missões to Spain; but, in practice, both regions were populated by Portuguese and Brazilian settlers. In 1801, the Badajoz treaty handed the Misiones (Missões) to the Portuguese; only the borders between modern Uruguay and Rio Grande do Sul remained in dispute.[12]

Cisplatine War

The districts of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande had been separated in 1760 for military convenience, and in 1807 the latter was elevated to the category of a "capitania-geral", with the designation of "Sao Pedro do Rio Grande", independent of Rio de Janeiro, and with Santa Catarina as a dependency. In 1812 Rio Grande and Santa Catarina were organized into two distinct comarcas, the latter becoming an independent province in 1822 when the Empire of Brazil was organized.

In 1816, the Portuguese captured Uruguay, which became a Province of Brazil (Província Cisplatina). This situation outlasted Brazil's independence from Portugal in 1822; in 1825, however, Juan Antonio Lavalleja proclaimed the independence of Uruguay; war followed, until in 1828 Brazil recognized Uruguayan independence.

Farroupilha Revolution

 
Rebel Cavalry during the Farroupilha Revolution.
 
Giuseppe Garibaldi leading the Riograndense navy to Laguna. Painting by Lucílio de Albuquerque, 1916.

Populating Rio Grande do Sul was a constant concern of the Portuguese. To that end, the metropolitan Crown distributed land in the form of enormous latifundia.[13]

In those large latifundia, cattle raising was the predominant economic activity. The Guaranis, under Jesuit rule, had started raising cattle in the Missões. The destruction of the Missões left astray immense herds, which went feral. Thus the newcomers from São Paulo and Santa Catarina settled by re-domesticating these feral herds, called "gado xucro".[14]

The Azorean settlers, on the other hand, mainly introduced wheat crops in much smaller properties. Up to the beginning of the 19th century, wheat was the main export product of Rio Grande do Sul.[14]

However, the introduction of charqueadas in the Southern coast, following the 1777 drought in Ceará, opened new opportunities to husbandry, as from them on, instead of moving herds by land to São Paulo, cattle could be sold in the relatively nearby region of Pelotas, to be slaughtered and processed there, and further transported by sea to Santos, Rio de Janeiro, and other Brazilian harbours. The cheap jerky was commonly used as food for the enslaved laborers in other parts of Brazil.[15]

Up to 1830, political unrest in Argentina and Uruguay favoured the jerky producers of Pelotas. But with order restored in these countries, competition by Argentinian and Uruguayan jerky producers became a concern. The jerky industry of the Plata was favored by the superior quality of Argentinian and Uruguayan pastures, by their better seaports,[16] and by their use of free labor, instead of slavery.[17] Consequently, the regional elites soon started to demand customs protection for the gaúcho jerky against the product of the Rio de la Plata; on the failure of the Imperial government to address those concerns, political demands of greater autonomy, and ideas of a federal relationship towards the rest of Brazil were put forth.[16]

These escalated into full rebellion in 1835. In 1834, the Imperial government issued an "Ato Adicional", allowing for elected Provincial legislative assemblies. The first gaúcha Legislative Assembly, inaugurated in April 1835, quickly confronted the Provincial President (appointed by the Regency on behalf of the Emperor, who was a minor). Rebellion broke out in the province on September 20, 1835; giving up hope of redress of the situation by the Imperial Government, the gaúchos proclaimed independence of the Riograndense Republic on September 11, 1836.[18]

 
Declaration of the Baron of Caxias announcing the end of the Revolution Farroupilha, 1845. National Archives of Brazil

The ensuing Farroupilha Revolution (known locally as Guerra dos Farrapos) lasted ten years. The rebels stormed Porto Alegre, but were driven out from there in June 1836. From then on, the Empire was able to control most of the coastal region, achieving decisive strategic advantage from this. However, in 1839, the rebels were still able to invade Santa Catarina, where they proclaimed a Juliana Republic, in a federal relationship with Rio Grande do Sul (during the Santa Catarina campaign, Giuseppe Garibaldi joined the rebels for a while before he returned to Europe and eventually became a hero in his native Italy). The Empire soon retook initiative, though, and from them on the rebels fought in the defensive.[19]

In 1842, the Empire assigned a new Provincial governor and military commander, the Baron, later Duke of Caxias. The inability of the rebels to secure contact with the world through a seaport, the dwindling economy of the Province, combined with Caxias' superior capabilities as military commander, led to the fall, in 1843, of important rebel strongholds, Caçapava do Sul, Bagé, and Alegrete. Economically exhausted and militarily defeated, the rebels accepted Caxias' terms of surrender. A general amnesty was declared, the rebellious officials were incorporated into the Imperial Army, slaves enrolled in the rebel Army were freed. Additionally, the Empire imposed a 25% tax on foreign jerky imports.[20]

The province suffered greatly in the struggle, but recovered quickly, not only due to the import tax protection, but mainly due to renewed instability in Argentina and Uruguay: Rosas' government in Argentina continually interfered in Uruguayan affairs until 1851, and Buenos Aires was blockaded by the French and the English from 1845 to 1848.[21]

Conflicts with neighbouring countries

At mid-19th century, Rio Grande do Sul was repeatedly involved in war between Brazil and its neighbours. Those included war against Argentina and Uruguay (deposal of Juan Manuel Rosas, Argentinian dictator, and Manuel Ceferino Oribe y Viana, Uruguayan president, 1852) and intervention in Uruguay (deposal of Atanasio Cruz Aguirre, 1864). This, in turn, led to Paraguayan intervention, and the Paraguayan War, known in Portuguese as Guerra do Paraguai.

In the war against Rosas, 75% of the Brazilian troops were gaúchos. As the only Brazilian boundaries actually facing foreign armies able to project the Empire's power, Rio Grande do Sul and its gaúchos quickly developed a reputation as soldiers.[22]

Paraguayan War

 
Map of Rio Grande do Sul in 1877 during the Empire of Brazil. National Archives of Brazil.
 
A German School in Estrela, 1866.
 
Italian Immigrants in Rio Grande do Sul, late 19th century.

During this long and bloody war against Paraguay, Rio Grande do Sul remained usually a secondary front. But in 1865 a Paraguayan division invaded the state, occupying Uruguaiana by August 5. By August 16, troops of the Triple Alliance put siege to Uruguaiana, and by September 17, an ultimatum was delivered to General Estigarribia, commander of the Paraguayan division. Having no possibility of breaking the siege or defending the position, the Paraguayans surrendered, under conditions, the following day.[23]

But if the territory of Rio Grande do Sul was spared most action, its dwellers provided a very significant part of the Brazilian troops: about 34,000 soldiers, more than 25% of the Brazilian army. This military characteristic of Rio Grande do Sul lasted long after the Paraguayan War: In 1879, of a standing army of less than 15,000, more than 5,000 were in Rio Grande do Sul. On the other hand, during the late Empire, more Brazilian generals were from Rio Grande do Sul than from any other province. In 1889, of 25 generals born in Brazil, four were from Rio Grande do Sul; and of the three born abroad, two were born in Uruguay but made their careers in Rio Grande do Sul.[24]

Late Empire

 
A German Protestant school for girls in Novo Hamburgo, 1886.

Political agitation was frequent in Rio Grande do Sul, but no important revolution occurred after the Ponche Verde Treaty in 1845 until the presidency at Rio de Janeiro of General Floriano Peixoto, whose ill-considered interference with state governments led to the revolt of 1892–94, under Gumercindo Saraiva.

After the Paraguayan War, Rio Grande do Sul underwent important changes in its economy. Railways connected the countryside to Porto Alegre and Rio Grande. Together with the introduction of steam ships, this reduced the costs and duration of transportation, facilitating the province's exports. New cattle breeds were introduced, and barbed wire was used to demarcate properties.[25]

As a consequence, the population of the province doubled between 1872 and 1890, from 434,813 inhabitants to 897,455.[26] This was partly due to immigration: about 60,000 immigrants, mostly from Italy, and, in lesser numbers, from Germany, came to Rio Grande do Sul during this period. Most of the Italians settled in the Serra Gaúcha, and most of the Germans in the valleys of the Jacuí, Sinos, and Caí, as small landed proprietors, and agricultural producers. In the area of German settlements, a messianic movement, the Muckers (German for false Saints) erupted in 1874, and was smashed by the Brazilian Army.[27]

Also during this period, the Liberal Party established its hegemony over the province, meaning control of the provincial legislature, the National Guard in Rio Grande do Sul, and most of the municipal governments. Before the War of the Triple Alliance, the Conservative and Liberal parties had alternated in local power, following the national tendency. But, from 1872 on, the Liberals, under the leadership of Gaspar Silveira Martins, were able to retain provincial power, even when the Conservatives won at national level.[28]

1893 Revolution

In this struggle the revolutionaries occupied Santa Catarina and Paraná, capturing Curitiba, but were eventually overthrown through their inability to obtain munitions of war. An incident in this struggle was the death of Admiral Saldanha da Gama, one of the most brilliant officers of the Brazilian navy and one of the chiefs of the naval revolt of 1893–94, who was killed in a skirmish on the Uruguayan border towards the end of the conflict.

1923 Revolution

In 1923, civil war again exploded between supporters of State President Borges de Medeiros and opposition linked to the Partido Libertador and Assis Brasil.

1930 Revolution

In 1930, State President Getúlio Vargas, after unsuccessfully running in the presidential elections against the candidate of São Paulo, Júlio Prestes, led a revolt against the Federal government, and succeeded in overthrowing it. This eventually led to the Vargas dictatorship in 1937 and the period known as the Estado Novo. What is now the Rio Grande do Sul Military Brigade fought on the side of the state leadership and, as a result, was never reformed. In fact, the Brigade remains the only state militia in Brazil. (The Military Police is the federal force that polices in the other states.) A poignant example of the Brigade's quasi-autonomy is the participation of its servicemen in both the coup attempt of 1961 and the military coup in 1964.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1872434,813—    
1890897,455+4.11%
19001,149,070+2.50%
19202,182,713+3.26%
19403,320,689+2.12%
19504,674,645+3.48%
19605,448,823+1.54%
19706,755,458+2.17%
19807,942,722+1.63%
19919,135,479+1.28%
200010,181,749+1.21%
201010,693,929+0.49%
201711,322,895+0.82%
source:[29]
 
A 19th-century house built by Italian immigrants in Caxias do Sul

According to the IBGE of 2008, there were 10,860,000 people residing in the state. The population density was 38.53 inhabitants per square kilometre (99.8/sq mi).

Urbanization: 81% (2004); population growth: 1.2% (1991–2000); houses: 3,464,544 (2005).[30]

The last PNAD (National Research for Sample of Domiciles) counted 8,776,000 white people (81%), 1,495,000 brown (Multiracial) people (14%), 529,000 black people (5%), 43,000 Amerindian people (0.4%), 11,000 Asian people (0.1%).[31]

According to a genetic study from 2013, Brazilians in Rio Grande do Sul have an average of 73% European, 14% African and 13% Amerindian ancestry.[32]

Ethnic groups

Ethnicities of Rio Grande do Sul in 2010.[33]

  White (83.22%)
  Pardo (mixed-race) (10.64%)
  Black (5.50%)
  Asian (0.33%)
  Indigenous (0.31%)

People of Portuguese – mostly Azorean – background predominate in the coastal region. The Southwest, on the other hand, was originally populated by Pampeano Indians.[34] Like the other Gauchos from the La Plata Basin the population there was a result from the mixture of Spanish and Portuguese men with Amerindian women with a possible predominant Spanish ancestry and also a significant African contribution,[35] resulting in a population that is 81.20% White.[36]

These theoretical speculations about Spanish predominance among the population of Southwestern Rio Grande do Sul are widely presumed, but they contradict the historical and modern genetic knowledge about the region. In fact, there was always some Spanish colonial presence there, however in practice restricted to Jesuit religious initiatives towards the Amerindian populations, which had limited genetic impact in the demographic composition of aboriginal populations. On the other hand, it is broadly accepted that it is northern Uruguay that always has had an important Luso-Brazilian influence,[37] which in fact impacts to this day the mixed Spanish-Portuguese language of northern Uruguay along the border with Brazil (borderlands).[38]

 
Kerb by Pedro Weingärtner, 1892. The work portrays a typical German festival in a rural community.
 
German architecture in Nova Petrópolis.

People of German descent predominate in the Sinos Valley (Novo Hamburgo, São Leopoldo, Nova Hartz, Dois Irmãos, Morro Reuter, etc.) and in the center-eastern part of the State (Santa Cruz do Sul). People of Italian descent predominate in the mountains (Serra Gaúcha: Caxias do Sul, Bento Gonçalves, Farroupilha, Garibaldi, etc.). The Northern and Northwestern parts of the State also have significant numbers of people of both Italian and German descent. There are sizeable communities of Poles and Ukrainians across the state, notably in the northwest. People of African ancestry are concentrated in the capital city and in some cities in the litoral, such as Pelotas and Rio Grande.[39]

According to Argentine demographer Miguel Ángel García, Italian immigrants were 60% of the total immigration to Rio Grande do Sul[40] and according to French historian Jean Roche as of 1950 people of German descent made up 21.6% of the state's population.[41]

 
Monument in Porto Alegre to honor the Azorean immigrants

The region that is now Rio Grande do Sul was originally settled by Amerindian peoples, mostly Guaraní and Kaingangs and, to a lesser extent, Charrúas and Minuanes.[42] European presence in the region started in 1627 with Spanish Jesuits. The Jesuits established Indian Reductions in the region; those reductions where populated exclusively by Amerindians, mainly Guarani, and certainly not by Europeans, either Spanish or Portuguese. Portuguese Jesuits established Indian Reductions in 1687 and dominated the region.[citation needed] Most of the Indians of the region became Catholics and went to live among the Jesuits. These reductions were destroyed by the Bandeirantes from São Paulo in the 18th century, who wanted to enslave the Indians. The Portuguese settlement in Rio Grande do Sul was largely increased between 1748 and 1756, with the arrival of two thousand immigrants from the Azores Islands, Portugal. They settled many parts of the state, including the nowadays capital, Porto Alegre. Blacks were 50 percent of Rio Grande do Sul's population in 1822. This proportion decreased to 25 percent in 1858 and to only 5.2 percent in 2005. Most of them were brought from Angola to work as slaves in the charqueadas.

German immigrants first arrived to Southern Brazil in 1824. They were attracted to Brazil to protect the country from invasions of the neighboring countries and to populate the empty interior of the southern region. The first city to be settled by them was São Leopoldo. In the next five decades, around 28 thousand Germans were brought to the region to work as small farmers in the countryside.[43]

Italian immigrants started arriving in Rio Grande do Sul in 1875. They were mostly poor peasants from Trentino and Veneto, Northern Italy, who were attracted to Southern Brazil to get their own farms. Italian immigration to the region lasted until 1914, with a total of 100,000 Italians settling there in this period. Most of the immigrants worked as small farmers, mainly cultivating grapes in the Serra Gaúcha part of the state.[44]

Other European immigrants migrated to Rio Grande do Sul, mostly from Eastern Europe. The Jewish Colonization Association assisted Russian-Jewish immigrants to settle on agricultural land in the state. A memoir of one such immigrant community, Filipson, Memórias da primeira colônia judaica no Rio Grande do Sul (Filipson: Memories of the First Jewish Colony in Rio Grande do Sul), was published by Frida Alexandr in 1967.[45]

 
The town of Gramado has occasional snowfalls.
 
Guardian Angel Cathedral in Santo Ângelo.

European genomic ancestry predominates throughout Brazil at 80%, except for the Southern Region (which includes Rio Grande do Sul), where it reaches 90%. "A new portrayal of each ethnicity contribution to the DNA of Brazilians, obtained with samples from the five regions of the country, has indicated that, on average, European ancestors are responsible for nearly 80% of the genetic heritage of the population. The variation between the regions is small, with the possible exception of the South, where the European contribution reaches nearly 90%. The results, published by the scientific magazine 'American Journal of Human Biology' by a team of the Catholic University of Brasília, show that, in Brazil, physical indicators such as skin colour, colour of the eyes and colour of the hair have little to do with the genetic ancestry of each person, which has been shown in previous studies".[46]

As of 2013, there were fewer than 30,000 Nisei in Rio Grande do Sul. Japanese immigrant families from São Paulo State began arriving in Rio Grande do Sul in the 1930s. In 1956, the first 23 official immigrants came to the state, and 26 families arrived at Rio Grande in the years from 1956 through 1963. In 2013, Peter B. Clarke, author of Japanese New Religions in Global Perspective, wrote that "Nowadays we cannot speak of a Japanese colony in RS."[47]

Largest cities

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Rio Grande do Sul
Rank Pop. Rank Pop.
 
Porto Alegre
 
Caxias do Sul
1 Porto Alegre 1,483,771 11 Alvorada 210,305  
Pelotas
 
Canoas
2 Caxias do Sul 510,906 12 Passo Fundo 203,275
3 Pelotas 342,405 13 Sapucaia do Sul 141,075
4 Canoas 346,616 14 Uruguaiana 126,970
5 Santa Maria 282,123 15 Santa Cruz do Sul 130,416
6 Gravataí 281,519 16 Cachoeirinha 130,293
7 Viamão 255,224 17 Bagé 121,143
8 Novo Hamburgo 246,748 18 Bento Gonçalves 120,454
9 São Leopoldo 236,835 19 Erechim 105,862
10 Rio Grande 211,005 20 Guaíba 98,143

Religion

Religion in Rio Grande do Sul (2010)[49][50]

  Catholic Church (68.8%)
  Protestantism (18.3%)
  Spiritism (0.8%)
  Other religions (4.4%)
  Irreligious (5.3%)

According to the 2010 Brazilian Census, most of the population (68.8%) is Roman Catholic, other religious groups include Protestants or evangelicals (18.3%), Spiritists (0.8%), Nones 5.3%, and people with other religions (4.4).[49][50]

Education

 
Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Hospital is a nationwide reference, it is located in the centre of Porto Alegre.
 
Unisinos University in São Leopoldo.

There are more than 100 universities in the state.[51] The largest public university is UFRGS and the largest private one is PUCRS.

Economy

 
Porto Alegre, capital of Rio Grande do Sul, at night
 
A winery in Bento Gonçalves. Rio Grande do Sul is the biggest wine producer in Brazil.
 
Sheep Farming in Rio Grande do Sul
 
Soybean plantation in Novo Barreiro.

The industrial sector is the largest component of GDP at 43%, followed by the service sector at 41%. Agriculture represents 16% of GDP (2004). Rio Grande do Sul exports: footwear 18%, soybeans 14%, tobacco 13.6%, vehicles 8%, frozen meat 7.2%, chemicals 6.8%, and leather 5% (2002).

Share of the Brazilian economy: 7% (2005).

One of the most prosperous Brazilian states, Rio Grande do Sul is known especially for its grain production, viticulture, ranching, and for its considerable industrial output.

In 1827, emigrants from Idar-Oberstein discovered the world's most important agate deposit in Rio Grande do Sul. As early as 1834, the first delivery of agate from Rio Grande do Sul had been made to Idar-Oberstein. The Brazilian agate exhibited very even layers, much more even than those seen in the local agates. This made them especially good for making engraved gems.

In agriculture, the state stands out in the production of soybeans, maize, wheat, rice, tobacco, grape, apple, cassava and yerba mate, in addition to also producing oat, barley, orange, peach, fig, tangerine, persimmon and strawberry.

In 2020, the South Region produced 32% of the national total of cereals, vegetables and oilseeds. There were 77.2 million tons, second place in Brazil, losing only to the Midwest. Rio Grande do Sul (14.3%) was the 3rd largest producer in the country.[52]

Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer of rice in the country, with 70.5% of Brazil's production, close to 7.3 million tons in 2020.[53][52] It is also the largest producer of tobacco in Brazil, and is the largest exporter in the world. Brazil is the second largest producer in the world and leader in tobacco exports since the 1990s, with 98% of Brazilian production being carried out in the South Region.[54][55] The state is responsible for 90% of the national production of grapes, and produces 90% of the wine produced in the country, 85% of the sparkling wine, and 90% of the grape juice, mainly in the area of Caxias do Sul and surroundings: 664.2 thousand tons of grape in 2018.[56][57][58]

In soy, Rio Grande do Sul is the 3rd largest producer in the country, with about 16% of national production. It produced 19.3 million tons.[59][52] In 2017, it was also 3rd largest producer of maize.[60][61][62]

Rio Grande do Sul is also the largest national producer of wheat, with 2.3 million tons in 2019.[52][63][64] The South Region is also the largest producer of oats in Brazil. In 2019, national production was close to 800 thousand tons, being almost all carried out in the South (Paraná and Rio Grande do Sul).[65][66]

The three Southern States of the country are responsible for 95% of the national production of apple, and Santa Catarina appears at the top of the production list, disputing with Rio Grande do Sul. Rio Grande do Sul harvests 45% of Brazilian apples, and is the largest exporter of apples in the country. The region in the vicinity of Vacaria is the highlight: it concentrates 88% of the state's production and 37% of the national production.[67][68]

In cassava production, Brazil produced a total of 17.6 million tons in 2018. The state was the 4th largest producer in the country, with almost 1 million tons.[69]

About orange, Rio Grande do Sul was the 5th largest producer in Brazil in 2018, with a total of 367 thousand tons.[70]

Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer of peaches in Brazil, with half the volume harvested in Brazil in 2018.[71] It is also the largest producer of fig in the country, according to data from 2018.[72] In 2018, Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd largest producers of tangerine in Brazil. Rio Grande do Sul is also responsible for 19% of Brazil's persimmon production, being the 2nd largest national producer.[73][74] In 2019, in Brazil, there was a total production area of around 4 thousand hectares of strawberry. Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd largest producer.[75]

In 2019, Brazil produced about 900 thousand tons of yerba mate annually. Paraná is the largest producer in volume and Rio Grande do Sul in plantation areas (and where the sector is more industrialized). According to 2017 data, Paraná harvested 301 thousand tons of yerba mate by extractive method, while Rio Grande do Sul harvested 17 thousand tons. On the other hand, while the gauchos harvested 302 thousand tons of planted grass, the Paraná harvested 237 thousand tons in this method. The productive potential of yerba mate is still little explored in Brazil, with a good part of the harvest carried out by the extractive system and with low levels of productivity. However, many new producers are adopting more professional and efficient production systems, with technical acuity of management and globalized market vision. This tends to increase Brazil's export of this product.

 
Expointer in Esteio is considered the largest livestock show in Latin America.

In 2018, the state's cattle herd was 12.5 million head, 7th place in the country, 6.5% of Brazil's cattle herd.[76]

In 2019, Rio Grande do Sul produced a total of 4.5 billion liters of milk, making it the third largest producer in the country, with 13.0% of the country's total.[77]

In sheep farming, in 2017 the South Region was the 2nd largest in the country, with 4.2 million heads. Rio Grande do Sul has 94% of the country's wool production.[78]

In pork, the 3 southern states are the largest producers in the country. Brazil had 41.1 million head in 2017. Rio Grande do Sul (14.6%) is the 3rd largest producer.[79][80]

 
Vineyards in Flores da Cunha
 
Neugebauer's headquarters in Arroio do Meio.
 
Marcopolo S.A. is a global bus and coach manufacturer with headquarters in Caxias do Sul.
 
Gerdau plant in Charqueadas
 
Calçados Beira Rio, one of the biggest shoe factories in the country.

The Brazilian poultry flock, in 2018, was of the order of 1.5 billion heads. In 2017, the main poultry producing states in Brazil were Paraná (25.3%), São Paulo (14.0%), and Rio Grande do Sul (11.0%). In terms of chickens, in 2017 there were 242.8 million heads in the country. Among the states that were the largest producers, São Paulo led with 21.9%, followed by Paraná (10.1%) and Rio Grande do Sul (8.8%).[81] In the production of chicken eggs, the state ranks fifth in Brazil, with 8% of national production. There were 354 million dozen in 2018.[82]

The South region was the main producer of honey in the country in 2017, accounting for 39.7% of the national total. Rio Grande do Sul was the largest producer in the country, with 15.2%.[79]

Regarding mining, the state is a major producer of gemstones. Brazil is the world's largest producer of amethyst and agate, and Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer in the country. Agate has local extraction since 1830. The largest producer of amethyst in Brazil is the city of Ametista do Sul. This stone was very rare and expensive worldwide, until the discovery of large deposits in Brazil, causing its value to drop considerably. There is also some jasper and opal in the state.[83][84][85][86][87]

 
Fertilizer industry in Rio Grande
 
Rice farming in Mariana Pimentel

About industry, Rio Grande do Sul had an industrial GDP of R$82.1 billion in 2017, equivalent to 6.9% of the national industry. It employs 762,045 workers in the industry. The main industrial sectors are: Construction (18.2%), Food (15.4%), Industrial Public Utility Services, such as Electricity and Water (9.8%), Chemicals (6.8%), and Machinery and Equipment (6.6%). These 5 sectors concentrate 56.8% of the state's industry.[88]

In the automotive sector, the state has a GM plant.[89]

The leather-footwear sector (Footwear industry) stands out particularly in Novo Hamburgo, Sapiranga and Campo Bom, and in virtually all other municipalities in Vale dos Sinos. in 2019 Brazil produced 972 million pairs. Exports were around 10%, reaching almost 125 million pairs. Brazil is in the 4th position among the world producers, behind China (who produces more than 10 billion pairs), India and Vietnam, and in 11th place among the biggest exporters. The largest pole of production in Brazil is located here. The Brazilian state that most exports the product is Rio Grande do Sul: in 2019 it exported US$448.35 million. The majority of the product goes to United States, Argentina and France. Domestic consumption absorbs a large part of production. The state has or created some of the most important factories in Brazil in the sector.[90][91]

In Food industry, In 2019, Brazil was the 2nd largest exporter of processed foods in the world, with a value of U $34.1 billion in exports. The Brazilian food and beverage industry's revenue in 2019 was R $699.9 billion, 9.7% of the country's Gross Domestic Product. In 2015, the industrial food and beverage sector in Brazil comprised 34,800 companies (not counting bakeries), the vast majority of which were small. These companies employed more than 1,600,000 workers, making the food and beverage industry the largest employer in the manufacturing industry. There are around 570 large companies in Brazil, which concentrate a good part of the total industry revenue. Rio Grande do Sul created food companies of national importance such as the Neugebauer chocolate factory; Vinícola Aurora and Vinícola Salton, two of the largest wineries in the country. and Camil Alimentos, which owns the brand Açúcar União (the most famous sugar brand in the country), Arroz Carretero (one of the most famous rice brands in Brazil), among others.[92][93][94]

The mechanical and metallurgical industry also reach considerable expression, especially in Porto Alegre, Novo Hamburgo, São Leopoldo and Canoas, in addition to Gravataí, Sapucaia do Sul, Esteio and Sapiranga, which have large companies in the sector and which also belong to the Metropolitan Region of Porto Alegre . These centers are joined by São Jerônimo, which houses the Charqueadas steel plant. The steel mill Aços Finos Piratini is located in Charqueadas, which belongs to Gerdau. It is geared mainly to serve the automotive industry.

In the metallurgical business, the state has one of the most famous companies in the country, Tramontina, originally from Rio Grande do Sul and famous manufacturer of knives, pans, shovels and various utensils, which has more than 8,500 employees and 10 manufacturing units. Other famous companies in the state are Marcopolo, a manufacturer of bus bodies, which had a market value of R $2.782 billion in 2015, and Randon, a group of 9 companies specialized in solutions for the transportation, which brings together manufacturers of vehicles, auto parts, and road equipment – employs around 11,000 people and recorded gross sales in 2017 of R $4.2 billion.

Another industrial area is the so-called old colonization region, in which the municipalities of Caxias do Sul, Garibaldi, Bento Gonçalves, Flores da Cunha, Farroupilha and Santa Cruz do Sul are integrated. The manufacturing activity is marked by the production of wine and processing of agropastoral products, such as leather, lard, maize, wheat and tobacco.

In the rest of the state there are several dispersed industrial centers, all linked to the processing of agropastoral raw materials. In this group, Erechim, Passo Fundo, Santa Maria, Santana do Livramento, Rosário do Sul, Pelotas, Rio Grande and Bagé stand out.

Statistics

  • Vehicles: 4,367,980 (March 2008)
  • Mobile phones: 12.3 million (June 2008)
  • Telephones: 3 million (April 2008)
  • Cities: 496 (2007)[95]

Infrastructure

Highways

 
BR-290 highway near Porto Alegre
 
BR-116 Highway in Ivoti.

The state has 153,960 km of highways, under national, state or municipal jurisdiction. The main highways are: BR-101, BR-116, BR-153, BR-158, BR-163, BR-285, BR-287, BR-290, BR-293, BR-386, BR-392 and BR-471. After decades of meager investments by successive State Governments, Rio Grande do Sul currently has a deficient road network and one of the worst in the southern half of the country: in 2020, there were still 54 cities without asphalt access (São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro , Santa Catarina and Mato Grosso do Sul had 100% of cities with asphalt access at the same time, Paraná and Minas Gerais had almost 100%).[96][97][98][99] The State also has few duplicated highways, roughly in the vicinity of the capital Porto Alegre, most of which belong to the Federal Government; despite the large number of state highways, the State Government did little in this field.[100] The situation only began to change in 2019, when the State carried out an economic and financial reorganization plan, and launched a specific program aimed at recovering and evolving the state's road network. This year, 62 municipalities still did not have access to asphalt: the project was to arrive in 2023 with 22 cities without access. Highway concessions held by Rio Grande do Sul, such as BR-287 and BR-386, carried out at the same time, aim to double the granted portions of these highways by 2035.[101][102][103] Currently, 211 km of the BR-116 between Guaíba and Pelotas are being duplicated, and in 2022 there were already 148 km duplicated.[104]

Ports

The Port of Rio Grande is of great importance for Mercosur, and also the main point of multimodality in the state, causing part of the road and rail system to focus on the Port of Rio Grande. The main ports are: Port of Rio Grande, Port of Porto Alegre, Port of Pelotas and Port of Estrela. The port terminals of Rio Grande, Porto Alegre and Pelotas handled, in 2021, 47.6 million tons of cargo, 45.18 million in the Port of Rio Grande alone.[105][106]

International airports

Porto Alegre

With 37.6 thousand square meters of constructed area and four levels, the passenger terminal at Salgado Filho International Airport can receive 28 large airplanes simultaneously. The terminal has 32 check-in counters, ten boarding bridges, nine elevators and ten escalators. It has a totally automated aircraft movement control center and the main spaces are air conditioned. The apron, surfaced with prestressed concrete, can serve jumbo jets like the Boeing 747-400. The garage structure has eight levels, 44 thousand square meters and 1,440 parking spaces. Another terminal, with 15 thousand square meters and capacity for 1.5 million passengers a year, serves general, executive and third-tier aviation (conventional piston-engine and turboprop planes). Porto Alegre Airport was the first one administered by Infraero to have integrated check-in. This service offers flexibility in use of terminal facilities and installations, enabling carriers to access their own data centers via shared-use computers from any check-in counter position. This makes it much easier to allocate counter space according to demand fluctuations, making for less idle space. The Aeroshopping area – a center for commerce and leisure – operates 24 hours a day with shops, services, a food court, along with a triplex cinema, the first to be established at a Brazilian airport. Salgado Filho International Airport also has an air cargo terminal, built in 1974, with 9,500 thousand square meters of area and capacity to handle 1,500 tons of export cargo and 900 tons of imports each month. The average daily movement (arrivals and departures) is 174 aircraft, flying scheduled routes connecting Porto Alegre directly or indirectly to all the country's other major cities, as well as smaller cities in the interior of the states of the South Region and São Paulo. There are also international flights with direct connections to cities of the Southern Cone.

Pelotas

The Pelotas International Airport is commonly used by the Brazilian Air Force as the last stop in Brazil on its flights to the Brazilian Antarctic Base.

Bagé

Comandante Gustavo Kraemer Airport opened on July 5, 1946. This airport came under Infraero administration on October 27, 1980. It is located on the rural outskirts of Bagé, 60 km (37 mi) from the Uruguayan border and 380 km (236 mi) from Porto Alegre. Comandante Gustavo Kraemer Airport does not operate with scheduled commercial flights. There are two daily flights carrying bank pouches, as well as air taxi services and executive jets. Most of the airport's users are businesspeople from the central part of Brazil who have interests in the region in breeding thoroughbred English and Arabian horses, cattle ranching, fruit growing, wine making, wood pulp and power generation.

Uruguaiana

Located on the border with Argentina (across the Uruguay River from the Argentine city of Paso de los Libres), Uruguaiana is considered the major inland port in Latin America, thanks to its strategic position with the countries of Mercosur. Rubem Berta International Airport, however, has only one flight, on Azul Brazilian Airlines, to Porto Alegre, – a situation Infraero intends to change, as was confirmed in an official visit to the airport in December 2004.

With more than 700 thousand square meters of constructed area, it is the largest airport in the interior of the state of Rio Grande do Sul.

 
Great Porto Alegre Metro System in São Leopoldo

There are two highways, BR-290 and BR-472, running near the airport, besides a railroad line about 2,500 meters from the terminal. Located 9 km (6 mi) from the city center, this airport is at an elevation of 78 meters and the average annual temperature is 20C, with a good deal of variation from summer to winter. Located 630 km (391 mi) from the state capital (Porto Alegre), Uruguaiana was founded on May 29, 1746, and has a current population of 126,936. Farming and ranching are the main economic activities of the region, which has 1,509 rural properties.

National airports

Caxias do Sul

 
Caxias do Sul Airport.

Hugo Cantergiani Airport (CXJ/SBCX) serves a vast region of important economical and touristic counties in the vicinities of Caxias do Sul, totalling 34 municipalities in this area of the "Serra Gaúcha". It is located at an altitude of 754 m (2 474 ft) as has one concrete runway (15/33) with the length of 2 000 m (6 562 ft) although only 1.650 m are usable if landing on runway 15. It is served on a daily basis by GOL and Azul airlines linking Caxias do Sul to São Paulo. It is equipped with a VASIS visual approach aid and is also certified for IFR approaches. References to these informations are published in the Portuguese version of this site.

Energy

 
Osório wind farm, the largest wind power park in Latin America.

In 2021, Rio Grande do Sul had around 7.2 GW of installed electrical power, a relatively low number compared to the country's total, which was around 170 GW at the time. Of the total, 80.6% came from renewable sources - 49% corresponded to hydroelectric plants, 19.5% to wind energy and 8.2% to photovoltaic solar energy. The state has high potential for wind power installation due to the average wind speed being one of the highest in the country. There are currently several projects for new wind farms in progress, in addition to investments in the state's power transmission lines, which were limited. Most projects for offshore wind energy in Brazil, in 2021, were in Rio Grande do Sul, with installation scheduled for 2030.[107][108][109][110]

In March 2022, Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd Brazilian state with the most solar energy installed in the individual distributed micro generation modality.[111]

The production of crude mineral coal in Brazil was 13.6 million tons in 2007. Santa Catarina produced 8.7 Mt (million tons); Rio Grande do Sul, 4.5 Mt; and Paraná, 0.4 Mt. Brazil has reserves of peat, lignite and hard coal. Coal totals 32 billion tons of reserves and is mainly in Rio Grande do Sul (89.25% of the total). The Candiota Deposit (in Rio Grande do Sul) alone has 38% of all national coal. As it's a coal of inferior quality, it's used only in the generation of thermoelectric energy and at the site of the deposit. The oil crisis in the 1970s led the Brazilian government to create the Energy Mobilization Plan, with intense research to discover new coal reserves. The Geological Survey of Brazil, through works carried out in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina, greatly increased the reserves of coal previously known, between 1970 and 1986 (mainly between 1978 and 1983). Good quality coal, suitable for use in metallurgy and in large volume (seven billion tons), was then discovered in several deposits in Rio Grande do Sul (Morungava, Chico Lomã, Santa Teresinha), but at relatively great depths (up to 1,200 m), which has hindered its use until now. In 2011, coal accounted for only 5.6% of the energy consumed in Brazil, but it is an important strategic source, which can be activated when, for example, the water levels in the dams are very low, reducing excessively the supply of hydroelectric power.[112][113]

Culture

 
Typical dance in a CTG (Center of Traditions)
 
Chimarrão is a traditional drink made by soaking dried leaves of the holly species Ilex paraguariensis in hot water
 
Grape Festival in Caxias do Sul
 
A typical meal in Rio Grande do Sul with wine, bread, cheese, pasta with beef and salami.

The state of Rio Grande do Sul is renowned as one of the most culturally rich states of Brazil. Rio Grande's music is a blend of many styles (most a continuum of rhythms found in neighboring countries), including the Chamamé, Milonga, Polca and Chacarera. Modern gaucho music or tchê music has been popular since the late 1980s. The inhabitants of the state are known in the country for drinking chimarrão, a local version of the mate drunk in neighbouring Uruguay and Argentina, and for consuming churrasco very regularly (a practice common due to the abundant sources of high quality meat), even going so far as considering this one of the most important elements of everyday life. Porto Alegre is home to Sport Club Internacional and Grêmio Foot-Ball Porto Alegrense. They are arch-rivals, one of the biggest rivalries in Brazil.

Each region of the state has its own cultural background. In the pampas (Southwest), the culture is still largely influenced by the old Gaúchos. Gaúcho is a term that can describe anyone born in the state of Rio Grande do Sul. However, it is also used to describe the 19th century rural workers of the region. Other parts of the state have a slightly different culture, influenced mainly by German or Italian immigrants. After some generations, the descendants of immigrants were integrated in the local society, even though their cultural influences are still strong, mostly in the countryside. Despite these differences, the Gaucho people maintain a particular zeal for their culture and its variations.

Although the Gaucho culture and its Portuguese-based language prevails in Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost state of Brazil, sharing many of its folklore characteristics with neighboring horseback livestock raising, grassland centered cultures, such as found in Uruguay and in Argentina, the state also has other strong albeit less prominent cultural focus areas.

These are, notably the German-Brazilian cultural identity and the Riograndenser Hunsrückisch language (the estimated number of speakers are around 1,500,000), spoken in the state since 1824; it received official recognition by the state House of Representatives in 2012 by unanimous vote. Also, as the result of European immigration stated in the 19th century, the state has an Italian culture and language of its own, the Talian language (a Veneto-based language/dialect), spoken mostly in the highlands region, at the so-called Old Italian Colonies in the upper state (see Italian-Brazilian).

However, there are many other much smaller cultural minorities in the state (for example, the Afro-Brazilian community, the Guarani and Kaingang[114] indigenous peoples, also Pomeranian, Polish, German-Jewish, etc.), However, these three are the predominant cultural expressions found in the state, each with living linguistic expressions which attest to their existence.

Tourism and recreation

 
Lago Negro (dark lake) in Gramado.
 
Enotourism in Bento Gonçalves.

High-end tourism is very popular in the Germanesque cities of Gramado and Canela; their cold weather is among their attractions for internal tourism. Tourism is also high in the wine regions of the state, principally Caxias do Sul and Bento Gonçalves. The pampas of the native Brazilian Gaúcho are both a national and international curiosity to tourists and their customs are alive in the capital city of Porto Alegre as well as in the cities of the "interior" or western Rio Grande do Sul such as Santa Maria and Passo Fundo. The state is also home to the historic São Miguel das Missões, the ruins of an 18th-century Jesuit Mission. The state of Rio Grande do Sul and its cities have developed a series scenic routes to appeal to tourists. The Rota Romântica is a popular scenic drive that exhibits the diverse Germanic culture of the mountainous regions of the state referred to as the Serra Gaúcha. One can visit the state's Italian settlements through Caminhos da Colônia, tour the wine country through the Wine and Grapes Route and visit a subsection of the Rota Romântica called the Região das Hortênsias, the region filled with blue hydrangea flowers each spring.

In the far western area of the state are the remnants of Brazil's 17th century Jesuit missions or reductions (aldeias) to the Guaraní Indians.

Of all the ruins left behind by the vanished Guarani Missions, the most significant one is São Miguel or São Miguel Arcanjo, located nearby the present city of Santo Ângelo. There is an ongoing Light and Sound (or Som e Luz in Portuguese) show presented at the ruins of the São Miguel church.

Language

As in all Brazil, Portuguese is the main spoken language. A few expressions of Spanish origin are common (such as "gracias" instead of "obrigado", or the vocative "tchê") etc., due to the proximity with Argentina and Uruguay and their common Gaucho past. Also a few words of German origin, particularly referring to cuisine, have entered the vocabulary, such as "chimia" (from "schmier") and "cuca" (from "Kuchen"). Words of Guarani language origin also make up the vocabulary, an example being the largely used word "guri", meaning "boy".

The Gaúchos are also famous by their use of the pronoun "tu", instead of "você", the latter being the formal second person singular noun and the first being the informal noun equivalent. In the traditional Gaúcho dialect of the Pampas, the verb is conjugated correctly in the second person singular, just like the European Portuguese (tu cantas, tu bates, tu partes, tu pões). In the colloquial Portuguese of Porto Alegre, however, the verb is conjugated in the second person as in the third person (tu canta, tu bate, tu parte, tu põe).[115]

Gaúcho Portuguese phonology

Phonemes of Porto-alegrense Portuguese

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar/
Palatal
Labiovelar Velar/
Uvular/
Glottal
Nasal m n ȷ̃ () (ŋ)  (ɰ̃)
Stop p  b t  d   ɡʷ k  ɡ
Fricative f  v s  z ʃ  ʒ χ~ʁ~h~ɦ
Affricate   
Lateral l
Approximant/
Flap
ɾ j w

Although this process is very common in the Southeast, in Gaúcho Portuguese the letters "s" and "z" are never pronounced as palato-alveolar consonants in coda position (e.g., pasto "pasture" is [ˈpaʃtu] in Rio de Janeiro, but [ˈpastu] in Porto Alegre).

In Rio Grande do Sul, as in most of Brazil, the letters "t" and "d" are pronounced as palato-alveolar affricate consonants, when immediately succeeded by the vowel "i" (a process very similar to Russian palatalization and which, however, does not happen in the varieties of the Pampas). Moreover, the unstressed "e" and "o" are often "reduced" into /ɪ/ and /ʊ/, respectively. Therefore, in Porto Alegre, the unstressed "te" syllables are pronounced /tʃi/, for example, while in the Pampas they are usually pronounced /tɪ/:

Porto Alegre: antigamente – /ɐ̃(n)ˌtʃiɡaˈmeȷ̃tʃʲ/ or /ɐ̃(n)ˌtʃiɡaˈmentʃʲ/

Gaúcho Pampas: antigamente – /ɐ̃ˌtʃiɡaˈme̞nte̞/

(compare Spanish: antiguamente – /ãn̪t̪iɣ̞waˈmẽ̞n̪t̪e̞/)

The dialect of the Pampas had suffered a stronger influence of Spanish language, while the dialect of Porto Alegre suffers modern influences of the Southeastern varieties.

Also, the vowel nasalization in Porto-alegrense Portuguese is far different from that seen in French, for example. In French, the nasalization extends uniformly through the entire vowel. In Porto Alegre, the nasalization begins almost imperceptibly, and then gets far stronger in the end of the vowel, therefore being closer to the nasalization of Hindi-Urdu phonology (see Anusvara). In some cases, the nasal archiphoneme actually represents the addition of a nasal consonant, like /m, n, ŋ, ȷ̃, w̃ , ɰ̃/.

manta = /ˈmɐ̃ntɐ/

tampa = /ˈtɐ̃mpɐ/

banco = /ˈbɐ̃ŋku/

bem = /bẽȷ̃/

bom = /bõʊ̯̃/ or /ˈbõɰ̃/ or /ˈbõŋ/

pan = /ˈpɐ̃ɰ̃/ or /ˈpɐ̃ŋ/

It is also noteworthy that, in everyday speech, many unstressed vowels are not fully pronounced as they are supposed to be. For example:

toque = /ˈtɔkʲ/

mente = /ˈmẽȷ̃tʃ/

pouco = /ˈpokʊ̥/

Essentially, the vowels [e] and [i] are both reduced and devoiced (or completely deleted) in word-final position, and sometimes also when unstressed and between consonants, always palatalizing the previous consonant. The vowels [o] and [u] are also reduced and devoiced to [ʊ̥], analogously to what happens in Japanese (see Japanese phonology#Devoicing). More rarely, [a] may become [ɐ̥] as well.

Example

 
Municipalities that the Talian is co-official in Rio Grande do Sul, highlighted in red: Bento Gonçalves,[116] Caxias do Sul,[117] Flores da Cunha,[118] Nova Roma do Sul[119][120] and Serafina Corrêa.[121]

"Dom Sebastião I era o décimo-sexto Rei de Portugal, e sétimo da Dinastia de Avis. Era neto do rei João III, tornou-se herdeiro do trono depois da morte do seu pai, o príncipe João de Portugal, duas semanas antes do seu nascimento, e rei com apenas três anos, em 1557. Em virtude de ser um herdeiro tão esperado para dar continuidade à Dinastia de Avis, ficou conhecido como O Desejado; alternativamente, é também memorado como O Encoberto ou O Adormecido, devido à lenda que se refere ao seu regresso numa manhã de nevoeiro, para salvar a Nação."

[ˈdõʊ̯̃ sebasʃiˈɐ̃ʊ̯̃ pɾiˈmeɪ̯ɾʊ ˈɛɾɐʊ̯ ˈdɛsimʊ ˈsestʊ ˈhej dʒi poɾtuˈɡaw | i ˈsɛtʃimʊ da dʒinasˈʃia dʒi ˈavis ‖ ɛɾɐ ˈnɛtʊ dʊ ˈheɪ̯ ʒʊˈɐ̃ʊ̯̃ teɾˈseɪ̯ɾʊ ‖ toɾˈnoʊ̯ sjeɾˈdeɪ̯ɾʊ dʊ ˈtɾonʊ deˈpojz da ˈmɔɾtʃi dʊ sew ˈpaɪ̯ | ʊ ˈpɾinsipi ʒʊˈɐ̃ʊ̯̃ dʒi poɾtuˈɡaʊ̯ | ˈdu.as seˈmɐ̃nɐs ˈɐ̃tʃis dʊ sew nasiˈmentʊ | i ˈhej kũw̃ aˈpenɐs ˈtɾez ˈɐ̃nʊs | ẽȷ̃ ˈmiw kiˈȷ̃entʊz i siŋˈkwentɐɪ̯ ˈsɛtʃi ‖ ẽȷ̃ viɾˈtudʒi dʒi ˈseɾ ũw̃ eɾˈdeɪ̯ɾʊ tɐ̃ʊ̯̃ ɪspeˈɾadʊ paɾɐ ˈdaɾ kontʃinwiˈdadʒ a dʒinasˈʃia dʒi ˈavis | fiˈkoʊ̯ kõȷ̃eˈsidʊ ˈkomʊ | ʊ dezeˈʒadʊ ‖ aʊ̯ˈteɾnaˈtʃivaˈmẽȷ̃tʃ | ˈɛ tɐ̃mˈbẽȷ̃ memoˈɾadʊ ˈkomʊ | ʊ ẽȷ̃koˈbɛɾtʊ | ˈoʊ̯ | ʊ aˈdoɾmeˈsidʊ ‖ deˈvidwa ˈlenda ki si heˈfɛɾjaʊ̯ ˈseʊ̯ heˈɡɾɛsʊ ˈnũma mɐ̃ˈȷ̃ɐ̃ dʒi ˈnevʊˈejɾʊ ˈpaɾa saʊ̯ˈvaɾ a naˈsɐ̃ʊ̯̃ ‖]

OBS: The pronunciation may be subject to free variation.

Native Portuguese speaker from Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul reading the above paragraph.

Minority languages

Minority languages spoken in Rio Grande do Sul include Indigenous languages (Guarani, Kaingang, etc.), and European derived languages (Talian, Riograndenser Hunsrückisch, East Pomeranian dialect of Low German, Yiddish and Polish).

Most of the German dialects speakers in southern Brazil spoke or eventually adopted Hunsrückisch so that it became the most commonly used German dialect in this part of the world and is still spoken by many people today (also referred to as Riograndenser Hunsrückisch to differentiate it from the Hunsrückisch spoken in Germany).

In its 180 years of history Riograndenser Hunsrückisch has been influenced by Portuguese and by other German dialects, such as Pfälzisch.

Talian is a Brazilian variety of the Venetian language, also often called Vêneto for that reason.

All minority languages in southern Brazil have experienced a significant degree of decline in the last few decades.

Sport

 
Estádio Beira-Rio, one of the venues for the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

Rio Grande do Sul currently has eight football teams belonging to the divisions of the Brazilian Football Championship: Internacional, Grêmio, Juventude, Caxias, Brasil de Pelotas; Lajeadense and Ypiranga. Sport Club Rio Grande, from the municipality of Rio Grande, is the oldest in Brazil and currently plays in the Campeonato Gaúcho of the Second Division.[122][123]

Rio Grande do Sul is also a national and world reference in futsal, with teams such as Inter/Ulbra in Porto Alegre, ACBF in Carlos Barbosa, Atlântico in Erechim, Ulbra in Canoas, Assoeva in Venâncio Aires and Enxuta in Caxias do Sul. The municipality of Carlos Barbosa is considered the futsal capital in Brazil.[124][125]

In the state, the following Olympic medalists were born: Mayra Aguiar and Daniel Cargnin (judo);[126][127] Fernando Scheffer (swimming);[128] André Johannpeter (equestrian);[129] André Heller, Gustavo Endres, Murilo Endres, Renan Dal Zotto, Paulão, Fernanda Garay, Carol Albuquerque, Éder, Janelson, Jorge Édson, Lucão, Marcus Vinícius and Thiago Alves (volleyball).[130][131][132] Also from the state is Thomaz Koch, considered one of the greatest tennis players in the history of Brazil[133][134] and Henrique Mecking, considered the greatest Brazilian chess player of all time, who came to be the 3rd best in the world;[135][136] in addition to World Championships medalists such as Babi and Deonise in handball,[137] João Derly and Maria Portela in judo,[138] Daiane dos Santos in gymnastics[139] and Samuel de Bona in the aquatic marathon.[140]

Notes

  1. ^ In the frontier dialects, it may be produced as [riw ˈɡɾɐ̃de do ˈsuɫ]. The European Portuguese pronunciation is [ˈʁi.u ˈɣɾɐ̃d(ɨ) ðu ˈsul].

References

  1. ^ "2020 IBGE Estimates – Estimates of Resident Population in Brazil, Federative Units and Municipalities" (PDF) (in Portuguese). IBGE.gov.br. Retrieved August 28, 2020.
  2. ^ (PDF) (in Portuguese). PNUD Brasil. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 15, 2019. Retrieved April 18, 2019.
  3. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on August 23, 2022.
  4. ^ "Rio Grande". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  5. ^ "Os estados mais e menos perigosos do Brasil" (in Portuguese). exame.abril.com.br. November 24, 2016. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  6. ^ Nicola Pamplona (November 17, 2017). "Apenas sete Estados tiveram queda no desemprego no terceiro trimestre" (in Portuguese). folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d e   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rio Grande do Sul". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 357–359.
  8. ^ (in Portuguese) Frio de "renguear cusco" May 27, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Página Cambará do Sul On-line
  9. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 7.
  10. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 8.
  11. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 8-9.
  12. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 9.
  13. ^ Luddock, John. Notes on Rio de Janeiro and the Southern Parts of Brazil; cited by Love, Joseph, O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 10.
  14. ^ a b Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 10
  15. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 10–11
  16. ^ a b Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 11
  17. ^ Cardoso, Fernando Henrique. Capitalismo e Escravidão no Brasil Meridional
  18. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 14
  19. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 15
  20. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, pp. 15–16
  21. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 16, footnote
  22. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p 16
  23. ^ http://www.momentodeuruguaiana.com.br/menu/memoria/memoria187.htm[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, pp. 16–17, quoting, for the figures, the Almanak do Ministério da Guerra no anno de 1889.
  25. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, pp. 17–18
  26. ^ "p. 32 (1)" (PDF). Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  27. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 19-21
  28. ^ Love, Joseph. O Regionalismo Gaúcho, p. 22-24
  29. ^ IGBE
  30. ^ Source: PNAD.
  31. ^ Sistema IBGE de Recuperação Automática – SIDRA (PDF) (in Portuguese). Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: IBGE. 2008. ISBN 978-85-240-3919-5. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  32. ^ Saloum de Neves Manta, Fernanda (September 20, 2013). "Revisiting the Genetic Ancestry of Brazilians Using Autosomal AIM-Indels". PLOS ONE. 8 (9): e75145. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...875145S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075145. PMC 3779230. PMID 24073242.
  33. ^ "Tabela 2094: População residente por cor ou raça e religião". sidra.ibge.gov.br. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
  34. ^ Telmo Remião Moure. Os grupos indígenas e sua distribuição
  35. ^ Andrea Rita Marrero.História genética dos gaúchos: dinâmica populacional do Sul do Brasil.
  36. ^ IBGE. Census 2000. Tabela 2094 – População residente por cor ou raça e religião/Mesorregião Geográfica = Sudoeste Rio-grandense – RS
  37. ^ Eliana Rosa Sturza. Línguas de fronteira: o desconhecido território das práticas lingüísticas nas fronteiras brasileiras: Na fronteira Brasil-Uruguai, a transgressão dos limites ocorreu, sobretudo, para dentro do território uruguaio. Primeiro se instalaram os portugueses e, posteriormente, os brasileiros, de tal modo que isso possibilitou a manutenção da língua portuguesa e determinou a sua importância no próprio processo de ocupação da região norte do Uruguai.
  38. ^ Michael T. Judd. O dialeto fronteiriço do Uruguai: origens, investigações e oportunidades February 27, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ RS VIRTUAL – O Rio Grande do Sul na Internet – História – Colonização – Negros – A história dos gaúchos sem história September 29, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^
  41. ^ Neiva Otero Schaeffer. Os alemães no Rio Grande do Sul. in Os Alemães no Sul do Brasil, Editora Ulbra, 2004 (2004). p. 170
  42. ^ "Página do Gaúcho – Índios – Os grupos indígenas e sua distribuição" (in Portuguese). Paginadogaucho.com.br. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  43. ^ Germans July 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Italians September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  45. ^ Igel, Regina (March 1, 2009). "Frida Alexandr". Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved December 8, 2016.
  46. ^ http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/ciencia/ult306u633465.shtml[bare URL]
  47. ^ Clarke, Peter B. Japanese New Religions in Global Perspective. Routledge, November 5, 2013. ISBN 1136828656, 9781136828652. p. 114.
  48. ^ "Panorama do estado do Rio Grande do Sul" (in Portuguese). Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  49. ^ a b «Censo 2010». IBGE
  50. ^ a b «Análise dos Resultados/IBGE Censo Demográfico 2010: Características gerais da população, religião e pessoas com deficiência» (PDF)
  51. ^ "Universidades no Rio Grande do Sul". Seruniversitario.com.br. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  52. ^ a b c d IBGE prevê safra recorde de grãos em 2020
  53. ^ Safra do arroz deve atingir mais de 1,14 milhão de toneladas em Santa Catarina
  54. ^ Região Sul é responsável por 98% da produção de tabaco no Brasil
  55. ^ . Portal do Agronegócio. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved September 3, 2009.
  56. ^ . Archived from the original on June 9, 2020. Retrieved July 21, 2020.
  57. ^ Vale do Rio do Peixe produz 86% da uva em SC
  58. ^ Produção de uva no Rio Grande do Sul cai quase 40% frente a 2018
  59. ^ Confira como está a colheita da soja em cada estado do país
  60. ^ Quatro estados concentram quase 70% da produção de grãos do país
  61. ^ Produção de Milho no Nordeste
  62. ^ Produção de grãos cresce 14% e Piauí se consolida como 3º maior produtor do Nordeste
  63. ^ Rio Grande do Sul deve superar Paraná na produção de trigo em 2019
  64. ^ BRASIL – IMPORTAÇÃO DE TRIGO 2019 (POR PAÍS)
  65. ^ Em abril, IBGE prevê alta de 2,2% na safra de grãos de 2019
  66. ^ Alternativa ao trigo, cevada ganha espaço no Sul e projeta produção recorde
  67. ^ Safra da maçã deve render 600 mil toneladas em Santa Catarina
  68. ^ Qualidade da fruta marca abertura da colheita da maçã e da uva no RS
  69. ^ Produção brasileira de mandioca em 2018
  70. ^ Produção brasileira de laranja em 2018
  71. ^ Como plantar pêssego
  72. ^ Conheça o caminho do figo brasileiro, do campo ao Canadá
  73. ^ Produção brasileira de tangerina em 2018
  74. ^ Caqui – Panorama nacional da produção
  75. ^ Qual o panorama da produção de morango no Brasil?
  76. ^ O RS possui 6,5% do rebanho bovino do Brasil
  77. ^ Bovinocultura de Leite
  78. ^ PPM 2017: Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro-Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados
  79. ^ a b PPM 2017: Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro-Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados
  80. ^ REGIÃO SUL DO BRASIL É O MAIOR CENTRO PRODUTIVO DE PROTEÍNA ANIMAL DO MUNDO
  81. ^ PPM 2017: Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro-Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados.
  82. ^ O RS é o 4º maior produtor de aves e de ovos do Brasil
  83. ^ Algumas Gemas Clássicas
  84. ^ Rio Grande do Sul: o maior exportador de pedras preciosas do Brasil
  85. ^ Os alemães e as pedras preciosas gaúchas
  86. ^ Maior pedra de água-marinha é brasileira e ficará exposta nos EUA
  87. ^ "Pedras de ametista são atrativos para turistas em cidade no Norte do RS". July 4, 2013.
  88. ^ Rio Grande do Sul Industry Profile
  89. ^ O novo mapa das montadoras
  90. ^ Abicalçados apresenta Relatório Setorial 2019
  91. ^ Exportação de Calçados: Saiba mais
  92. ^ A indústria de alimentos e bebidas na sociedade brasileira atual
  93. ^ Faturamento da indústria de alimentos cresceu 6,7% em 2019
  94. ^ "Indústria de alimentos e bebidas faturou R$ 699,9 bi em 2019". February 18, 2020.
  95. ^ Source: IBGE.
  96. ^ No RS, 54 municípios ainda não têm acesso asfáltico e criança com poeira, buracos e dificuldades necessário
  97. ^ Quatro cidades do Paraná não têm acessos por rodovias estaduais asfaltadas; enfrentam lama e transtornos
  98. ^ Moradores de cidades sem ligação asfáltica vivencia por lama e poeira
  99. ^ Santa Catarina tem, agora, acesso asfaltado a todas as 295 cidades
  100. ^ Mapa rodoviário do Rio Grande do Sul em 2021
  101. ^ Governo libera R$ 37 milhões para acessos asfálticos em oito municípios
  102. ^ Como está a BR-386 nove meses depois da concessão para a iniciativa privada
  103. ^ Governador assina contrato de concessão que garantirá duplicação e investimentos de R$ 2,7 bilhões na RSC-287
  104. ^ DNIT libera mais 11,3 km de trecho duplicado na BR-116/RS
  105. ^ Porto RS
  106. ^ Portos do RS movimentam mais de 47 milhões de toneladas em carga e fecham 2021 com recorde
  107. ^ “Fazemos grande esforço para ampliar geração de energia renovável no RS”, destaca governador em painel nacional
  108. ^ EÓLICA VAI REVOLUCIONAR MATRIZ ENERGÉTICA DO RS
  109. ^ RS atrai maior número de empresas no país para explorar energia eólica em alto-mar
  110. ^ RS em números
  111. ^ Brasil ultrapassa marca de 10 GW em micro e minigeração distribuída
  112. ^ Carvão Mineral
  113. ^ Carvão mineral no Brasil e no mundo
  114. ^ Terra Indígena Guarita: Bem Vindo á Terra Indígena Guarita – Tenente Portela, Rio Grande do Sul – Brasil Archived April 10, 2013, at archive.today
  115. ^ DICIONÁRIO DE PORTO-ALEGRÊS – Luís Augusto Fischer – L&PM Pocket – A maior coleção de livros de bolso do Brasil (in Portuguese). Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil: L&PM. 2007. ISBN 978-85-254-1681-0. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  116. ^
  117. ^
  118. ^
  119. ^ – Dispõe sobre a cooficialização da língua do "talian", à língua portuguesa, no município de Nova Roma do Sul"
  120. ^ , município de Nova Roma do Sul
  121. ^ , Retrieved August 21, 2011
  122. ^ Grêmio é pentacampeão gaúcho e reduz vantagem de títulos do Inter; veja o ranking completo
  123. ^ Grêmio supera Inter e terá maior jejum de títulos grandes da história do RS
  124. ^ Veja os times com mais títulos da Liga Nacional de Futsal
  125. ^ Carlos Barbosa penta, Jaraguá tetra... confira todos os campeões da Liga Nacional de Futsal (LNF)
  126. ^ "Mayra Aguiar". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  127. ^ "Daniel Cargnin". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  128. ^ "Fernando Scheffer". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  129. ^ "André Johannpeter". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  130. ^ "André Heller". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  131. ^ "Gustavo Endres". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  132. ^ "Murilo Endres". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  133. ^ "10 maiores tenistas brasileiros". Yahoo Esportes. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  134. ^ "Especial 20 anos: os maiores brasileiros do tênis". Tenisbrasil. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  135. ^ "Conheça o currículo de Mequinho, O melhor enxadrista do Brasil". Diário de Cuiabá. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  136. ^ "Mequinho, 1º brasileiro grande mestre de xadrez". Folha de São Paulo. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  137. ^ "É campeão! Brasil vence a Sérvia e conquista seu primeiro título mundial". Globoesporte. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  138. ^ "A trajetória do bicampeão mundial". Sogipa. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  139. ^ "Daiane dos Santos". COB. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
  140. ^ "Grandes momentos de 2013: Samuel de Bona". Rede do Esporte. Retrieved September 2, 2022.

External links

  • (in Portuguese) Official website

grande, ɑː, portuguese, ˈʁi, ˈɡɾɐ, ˈsuw, listen, great, river, south, state, southern, region, brazil, fifth, most, populous, state, ninth, largest, area, located, southernmost, part, country, bordered, clockwise, santa, catarina, north, northeast, atlantic, o. Rio Grande do Sul UK ˌ r iː uː ˌ ɡ r ae n d i d uː ˈ s ʊ l 3 US ˌ ɡ r ɑː n d i d uː ˈ s uː l 4 Portuguese ˈʁi u ˈɡɾɐ dʒ i du ˈsuw listen a lit Great River of the South is a state in the southern region of Brazil It is the fifth most populous state and the ninth largest by area Located in the southernmost part of the country Rio Grande do Sul is bordered clockwise by Santa Catarina to the north and northeast the Atlantic Ocean to the east the Uruguayan departments of Rocha Treinta y Tres Cerro Largo Rivera and Artigas to the south and southwest and the Argentine provinces of Corrientes and Misiones to the west and northwest The capital and largest city is Porto Alegre The state has the highest life expectancy in Brazil and the crime rate is relatively low compared to the Brazilian national average 5 Despite the high standard of living unemployment is still high in the state as of 2017 6 The state has 5 4 of the Brazilian population and it is responsible for 6 6 of the Brazilian GDP Rio Grande do SulStateState of Rio Grande do SulFlagCoat of armsMotto s Liberdade Igualdade Humanidade Portuguese Liberty Equality Humanity Anthem Hino Rio GrandenseMap of Brazil with Rio Grande do Sul highlightedCoordinates 30 S 53 W 30 S 53 W 30 53 Coordinates 30 S 53 W 30 S 53 W 30 53Country BrazilCapital and Largest city Porto AlegreGovernment GovernorEduardo Leite PSDB Vice GovernorGabriel Souza MDB SenatorsLasier Martins PODE Luis Carlos Heinze PP Paulo Paim PT Area Total281 707 149 km2 108 767 738 sq mi Rank9thPopulation 2020 1 Total11 422 973 Rank6th Density41 km2 110 sq mi Rank13thDemonym s Rio grandense sul rio grandense or gauchoGDP Year2015 TotalUS 205 billion PPP US 115 billion nominal 4th Per capitaUS 18 131 PPP US 10 244 nominal 5th HDI Year2017 Category0 787 2 high 6th Time zoneUTC 3 BRT Postal code90000 000 to 99990 000ISO 3166 codeBR RSLicense Plate Letter SequenceIAQ to JDOWebsiters gov brThe state shares a gaucho culture with its neighbors Argentina and Uruguay Before the arrival of Portuguese and Spanish settlers it was inhabited mostly by the Guarani and Kaingang peoples with smaller populations of Charrua and Minuane The first Europeans there were Jesuits followed by settlers from the Azores In the 19th century it was the scene of conflicts including the Ragamuffin War and the Paraguayan War Large waves of German and Italian migration have shaped the state as well Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 1 2 Ecoregions 2 History 2 1 Guarani Wars 2 2 Cisplatine War 2 3 Farroupilha Revolution 2 4 Conflicts with neighbouring countries 2 5 Paraguayan War 2 6 Late Empire 2 7 1893 Revolution 2 8 1923 Revolution 2 9 1930 Revolution 3 Demographics 3 1 Ethnic groups 3 2 Largest cities 3 3 Religion 3 4 Education 4 Economy 4 1 Statistics 5 Infrastructure 5 1 Highways 5 2 Ports 5 3 International airports 5 3 1 Porto Alegre 5 3 2 Pelotas 5 3 3 Bage 5 3 4 Uruguaiana 5 4 National airports 5 4 1 Caxias do Sul 5 5 Energy 6 Culture 7 Tourism and recreation 8 Language 8 1 Gaucho Portuguese phonology 8 1 1 Phonemes of Porto alegrense Portuguese 8 1 2 Example 8 2 Minority languages 9 Sport 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksGeography Edit Map with municipal boundaries Rio Grande do Sul is bordered to the northeast by the Brazilian State of Santa Catarina to the southeast by the Atlantic Ocean on the southwest by Uruguay and to the northwest by the Argentine provinces of Corrientes and Misiones The northern part of the state lies on the southern slopes of the elevated plateau extending southward from Sao Paulo across the states of Parana and Santa Catarina and is much broken by low mountain ranges whose general direction across the trend of the slope gives them the appearance of escarpments A range of low mountains extends southward from the Serra do Mar of Santa Catarina and crosses the state into Uruguay West of this range is a vast grassy plain devoted principally to stock raising the northern and most elevated part being suitable in pasturage and climate for sheep and the southern for cattle East of it is a wide coastal zone only slightly elevated above the sea within it are two great estuarine lagoons the Lagoa dos Patos and Lagoa Mirim which are separated from the ocean by two sandy partially barren peninsulas The coast is one great sand beach broken only by the outlet of the two lakes called the Rio Grande which affords an entrance to navigable inland waters and several ports There are two distinct river systems in Rio Grande do Sul that of the eastern slope draining to the lagoons and that of the Rio de la Plata basin draining westward to the Uruguay River 7 Araucaria in the Mountains Region of Rio Grande do Sul Pampas deer The larger rivers of the eastern group are the Jacui Sinos Cai Gravatai and Camaqua which flow into the Lagoa dos Patos and the Jaguarao which flows into the Lagoa Mirim All of the first named except the Camaqua discharge into one of the two arms or estuaries opening into the northern end of Lagoa dos Patos which is called the Guaiba River though technically it is not a river but a lake The Guaiba River is broad comparatively deep and about 56 kilometres 35 mi long and with the rivers discharging into it affords upwards of 320 kilometres 200 mi of fluvial navigation The Jacui is one of the most important rivers of the state rising in the ranges of the Coxilha Grande of the north and flowing south and southeast to the Guaiba estuary with a course of nearly 480 kilometres 300 mi It has two large tributaries the Vacacai from the south and the Taquari from the north and many small streams The Jaguarao which forms part of the boundary line with Uruguay is navigable 42 km up to and beyond the town of Jaguarao 7 Yacuma Falls in the Turvo State Park are the second widest in the world In addition to the Lagoa dos Patos and Lagoa Mirim there are a number of small lakes on the sandy swampy peninsulas that lie between the coast and these two and there are others of a similar character along the northern coast The largest lake is the Lagoa dos Patos Lake of the Patos an Indian tribe inhabiting its shores at the time of European discovery which lies parallel with the coastline northeast and southwest and is about 214 kilometres 133 mi long exclusive of the two arms at its northern end 40 58 km long respectively and of its outlet the Rio Grande about 39 km long Its width varies from 35 to 58 km The lake is comparatively shallow and filled with sand banks making its navigable channels tortuous and difficult The Lagoa Mirim occupies a similar position farther south on the Uruguayan border and is about 175 kilometres 109 mi long by 10 to 35 km wide It is more irregular in outline and discharges into Lagoa dos Patos through a navigable channel known as the Sao Goncalo Channel A part of the lake lies in Uruguayan territory but its navigation as determined by treaty belongs exclusively to Brazil Both of these lakes are evidently the remains of an ancient depression in the coastline shut in by sand beaches built up by the combined action of wind and current They are of the same level as the ocean but their waters are affected by the tides and are brackish only a short distance above the Rio Grande outlet 7 Fully one third of the state belongs to the Rio de la Plata drainage basin Of the many streams flowing northward and westward to the Uruguay the largest are the Ijui of the plateau region the Ibicui which has its source near Santa Maria in the central part of the state and flows westward to the Uruguay a short distance above Uruguaiana and the Quarai River which forms part of the boundary line with Uruguay The Uruguay River itself is formed by the confluence of the Canoas and Pelotas rivers The Pelotas which has its source in the Serra do Mar on the Atlantic coast and the Uruguay River forms the northern and western boundary line of the state down to the mouth of the Quarai on the Uruguayan frontier 7 Climate Edit Pico do Monte Negro is the highest mountain in the state Canyon Fortaleza at the Aparados da Serra National Park Snow in Caxias do Sul Rio Grande do Sul lies within the south temperate zone and is predominantly humid subtropical Cfa according to the Koppen climate classification The climate is subtropical highland Cfb in the highest areas There are four relatively well defined seasons and rainfall is well distributed throughout the year but occasional droughts can occur The winter months June to September are characterized by heavy rains and by a cold southwesterly wind called minuano which sometimes lowers the temperature to below freezing especially in the mountainous municipalities 7 where snowfalls can occur The lowest official temperature registered in the state was 9 8 C 14 F in Bom Jesus on August 1 1955 8 In summer the temperature rises to 37 C 99 F and heat related injuries are not uncommon Ecoregions Edit Several ecoregions cover portions of the state In the northeastern corner of the state between the Serra do Mar Serra Geral and the Atlantic lies the southern extension of the Serra do Mar coastal forests a belt of evergreen tropical moist forests that extend north along the coastal strip as far as Rio de Janeiro state The high plateau behind the Serra do Mar is occupied by the Araucaria moist forests a subtropical forests characterized by evergreen laurel leaved forests interspersed with emergent Brazilian Pines Araucaria angustifolia The Alto Parana Atlantic forests lie on the lower slopes of the plateau south and east of the Araucaria forests including much of the lower basin of the Jacui and its tributaries These forests are semi deciduous with many trees losing their leaves in the winter dry season The Atlantic Coast restingas distinctive forests which grow on nutrient poor coastal dunes extend along the coast as far as the Uruguayan border The southeastern portion of the state is covered by the Pampas which extends south into Uruguay in a plateau named Serras de Sudeste Southeastern Mountain Ranges History EditDuring the Brazilian Colonial period the province of South Rio Grande was the scene of small wars and border skirmishes between Portugal and Spain for the region the Sacramento Colony and the Guarani Missions It was also a focal point for internal rebellions in the 19th and the early 20th centuries Guarani Wars Edit Main article Guarani War According to the treaty of Tordesillas the region was to be part of the Spanish possessions in South America However the Spanish were much more interested in the Pacific Coast where gold silver and gems were quickly found Even in the Atlantic coast their attention was on the River Plate where they built the seaport of Buenos Aires on its right bank Consequently Spanish settlement followed the course of the River Plate and its tributaries especially the Parana and Uruguay rivers largely ignoring the Rio Grande do Sul area The Spanish introduced livestock which escaped into the plains and attracted gauchos to the area The first Spanish to settle in the region that is now Paraguay northwestern Argentina Corrientes Misiones and Rio Grande do Sul were Jesuit missionary priests who came with the idea of converting the indigenous population to Catholic Christianity To that end they founded missionary villages known in Spanish as misiones or reducciones populated by Guarani Indians In the early 17th century the Jesuits founded missions to the east of the Uruguay river and in the northwest of modern Rio Grande do Sul 9 The historic town of Sao Miguel das Missoes The missions were destroyed and their Guarani inhabitants were enslaved in large raids by bandeirantes between 1636 and 1638 however in 1687 the Jesuits were back in the region having refounded seven reductions the Misiones Orientales The region remained under Spanish sovereignty though in practice the Jesuits operated quite independently as consequence of the spanish laws up to the late 17th century But in 1680 the Portuguese founded Colonia do Sacramento on the northern bank of the River Plate in what is now Uruguay War ensued and was intermittent until the independence of Uruguay in 1828 10 The logistics of defending Colonia against the Spanish resulted in a government effort to settle Rio Grande do Sul s coastal region with Brazilian and Portuguese colonists In 1737 a fortified village today the city of Rio Grande was built at the entrance of Lagoa dos Patos In 1752 a group of Azorean settlers founded Porto Alegre to the west Rio Pardo was also founded Towards the middle of the century Brazilians and Portuguese arrived to the west of the region clashing with the Jesuits and the Guaranis Up to 1756 the Guaranis fought back under the leadership of Sepe Tiaraju who was popularly canonized as Sao Sepe Saint Sepe However the Portuguese and Brazilians eventually crushed the resistance destroyed the missions and the region came definitely into Portuguese hegemony 11 In 1738 the territory which included the present state of Santa Catarina became the Capitania d el Rei and was made a dependency of Rio de Janeiro Territorial disputes between Spain and Portugal led to the occupation by the Spaniards of the town of Rio Grande then the capital of the capitania and neighboring districts from 1763 to 1776 when they reverted to the Portuguese The capture of Rio Grande in 1763 caused the removal of the seat of government to Viamao at the head of Lagoa dos Patos in 1773 Porto dos Cazaes renamed Porto Alegre became the capital These historic acts were planned and directed by Manuel Sepulveda who used the fictitious name or pseudonym Jose Marcelino de Figueiredo to hide his identity In 1801 news of war between Spain and Portugal led to the capture of the Sete Povos and some frontier posts In 1777 the Santo Ildefonso Treaty granted the coastal region to Portugal and the Missoes to Spain but in practice both regions were populated by Portuguese and Brazilian settlers In 1801 the Badajoz treaty handed the Misiones Missoes to the Portuguese only the borders between modern Uruguay and Rio Grande do Sul remained in dispute 12 Cisplatine War Edit Main article Cisplatine War The districts of Santa Catarina and Rio Grande had been separated in 1760 for military convenience and in 1807 the latter was elevated to the category of a capitania geral with the designation of Sao Pedro do Rio Grande independent of Rio de Janeiro and with Santa Catarina as a dependency In 1812 Rio Grande and Santa Catarina were organized into two distinct comarcas the latter becoming an independent province in 1822 when the Empire of Brazil was organized In 1816 the Portuguese captured Uruguay which became a Province of Brazil Provincia Cisplatina This situation outlasted Brazil s independence from Portugal in 1822 in 1825 however Juan Antonio Lavalleja proclaimed the independence of Uruguay war followed until in 1828 Brazil recognized Uruguayan independence Farroupilha Revolution Edit Main article Farroupilha Revolution Rebel Cavalry during the Farroupilha Revolution Giuseppe Garibaldi leading the Riograndense navy to Laguna Painting by Lucilio de Albuquerque 1916 Populating Rio Grande do Sul was a constant concern of the Portuguese To that end the metropolitan Crown distributed land in the form of enormous latifundia 13 In those large latifundia cattle raising was the predominant economic activity The Guaranis under Jesuit rule had started raising cattle in the Missoes The destruction of the Missoes left astray immense herds which went feral Thus the newcomers from Sao Paulo and Santa Catarina settled by re domesticating these feral herds called gado xucro 14 The Azorean settlers on the other hand mainly introduced wheat crops in much smaller properties Up to the beginning of the 19th century wheat was the main export product of Rio Grande do Sul 14 However the introduction of charqueadas in the Southern coast following the 1777 drought in Ceara opened new opportunities to husbandry as from them on instead of moving herds by land to Sao Paulo cattle could be sold in the relatively nearby region of Pelotas to be slaughtered and processed there and further transported by sea to Santos Rio de Janeiro and other Brazilian harbours The cheap jerky was commonly used as food for the enslaved laborers in other parts of Brazil 15 Up to 1830 political unrest in Argentina and Uruguay favoured the jerky producers of Pelotas But with order restored in these countries competition by Argentinian and Uruguayan jerky producers became a concern The jerky industry of the Plata was favored by the superior quality of Argentinian and Uruguayan pastures by their better seaports 16 and by their use of free labor instead of slavery 17 Consequently the regional elites soon started to demand customs protection for the gaucho jerky against the product of the Rio de la Plata on the failure of the Imperial government to address those concerns political demands of greater autonomy and ideas of a federal relationship towards the rest of Brazil were put forth 16 These escalated into full rebellion in 1835 In 1834 the Imperial government issued an Ato Adicional allowing for elected Provincial legislative assemblies The first gaucha Legislative Assembly inaugurated in April 1835 quickly confronted the Provincial President appointed by the Regency on behalf of the Emperor who was a minor Rebellion broke out in the province on September 20 1835 giving up hope of redress of the situation by the Imperial Government the gauchos proclaimed independence of the Riograndense Republic on September 11 1836 18 Declaration of the Baron of Caxias announcing the end of the Revolution Farroupilha 1845 National Archives of Brazil The ensuing Farroupilha Revolution known locally as Guerra dos Farrapos lasted ten years The rebels stormed Porto Alegre but were driven out from there in June 1836 From then on the Empire was able to control most of the coastal region achieving decisive strategic advantage from this However in 1839 the rebels were still able to invade Santa Catarina where they proclaimed a Juliana Republic in a federal relationship with Rio Grande do Sul during the Santa Catarina campaign Giuseppe Garibaldi joined the rebels for a while before he returned to Europe and eventually became a hero in his native Italy The Empire soon retook initiative though and from them on the rebels fought in the defensive 19 In 1842 the Empire assigned a new Provincial governor and military commander the Baron later Duke of Caxias The inability of the rebels to secure contact with the world through a seaport the dwindling economy of the Province combined with Caxias superior capabilities as military commander led to the fall in 1843 of important rebel strongholds Cacapava do Sul Bage and Alegrete Economically exhausted and militarily defeated the rebels accepted Caxias terms of surrender A general amnesty was declared the rebellious officials were incorporated into the Imperial Army slaves enrolled in the rebel Army were freed Additionally the Empire imposed a 25 tax on foreign jerky imports 20 The province suffered greatly in the struggle but recovered quickly not only due to the import tax protection but mainly due to renewed instability in Argentina and Uruguay Rosas government in Argentina continually interfered in Uruguayan affairs until 1851 and Buenos Aires was blockaded by the French and the English from 1845 to 1848 21 Conflicts with neighbouring countries Edit At mid 19th century Rio Grande do Sul was repeatedly involved in war between Brazil and its neighbours Those included war against Argentina and Uruguay deposal of Juan Manuel Rosas Argentinian dictator and Manuel Ceferino Oribe y Viana Uruguayan president 1852 and intervention in Uruguay deposal of Atanasio Cruz Aguirre 1864 This in turn led to Paraguayan intervention and the Paraguayan War known in Portuguese as Guerra do Paraguai In the war against Rosas 75 of the Brazilian troops were gauchos As the only Brazilian boundaries actually facing foreign armies able to project the Empire s power Rio Grande do Sul and its gauchos quickly developed a reputation as soldiers 22 Paraguayan War Edit Map of Rio Grande do Sul in 1877 during the Empire of Brazil National Archives of Brazil A German School in Estrela 1866 Italian Immigrants in Rio Grande do Sul late 19th century Main article Paraguayan War During this long and bloody war against Paraguay Rio Grande do Sul remained usually a secondary front But in 1865 a Paraguayan division invaded the state occupying Uruguaiana by August 5 By August 16 troops of the Triple Alliance put siege to Uruguaiana and by September 17 an ultimatum was delivered to General Estigarribia commander of the Paraguayan division Having no possibility of breaking the siege or defending the position the Paraguayans surrendered under conditions the following day 23 But if the territory of Rio Grande do Sul was spared most action its dwellers provided a very significant part of the Brazilian troops about 34 000 soldiers more than 25 of the Brazilian army This military characteristic of Rio Grande do Sul lasted long after the Paraguayan War In 1879 of a standing army of less than 15 000 more than 5 000 were in Rio Grande do Sul On the other hand during the late Empire more Brazilian generals were from Rio Grande do Sul than from any other province In 1889 of 25 generals born in Brazil four were from Rio Grande do Sul and of the three born abroad two were born in Uruguay but made their careers in Rio Grande do Sul 24 Late Empire Edit A German Protestant school for girls in Novo Hamburgo 1886 Political agitation was frequent in Rio Grande do Sul but no important revolution occurred after the Ponche Verde Treaty in 1845 until the presidency at Rio de Janeiro of General Floriano Peixoto whose ill considered interference with state governments led to the revolt of 1892 94 under Gumercindo Saraiva After the Paraguayan War Rio Grande do Sul underwent important changes in its economy Railways connected the countryside to Porto Alegre and Rio Grande Together with the introduction of steam ships this reduced the costs and duration of transportation facilitating the province s exports New cattle breeds were introduced and barbed wire was used to demarcate properties 25 As a consequence the population of the province doubled between 1872 and 1890 from 434 813 inhabitants to 897 455 26 This was partly due to immigration about 60 000 immigrants mostly from Italy and in lesser numbers from Germany came to Rio Grande do Sul during this period Most of the Italians settled in the Serra Gaucha and most of the Germans in the valleys of the Jacui Sinos and Cai as small landed proprietors and agricultural producers In the area of German settlements a messianic movement the Muckers German for false Saints erupted in 1874 and was smashed by the Brazilian Army 27 Also during this period the Liberal Party established its hegemony over the province meaning control of the provincial legislature the National Guard in Rio Grande do Sul and most of the municipal governments Before the War of the Triple Alliance the Conservative and Liberal parties had alternated in local power following the national tendency But from 1872 on the Liberals under the leadership of Gaspar Silveira Martins were able to retain provincial power even when the Conservatives won at national level 28 1893 Revolution Edit In this struggle the revolutionaries occupied Santa Catarina and Parana capturing Curitiba but were eventually overthrown through their inability to obtain munitions of war An incident in this struggle was the death of Admiral Saldanha da Gama one of the most brilliant officers of the Brazilian navy and one of the chiefs of the naval revolt of 1893 94 who was killed in a skirmish on the Uruguayan border towards the end of the conflict 1923 Revolution Edit In 1923 civil war again exploded between supporters of State President Borges de Medeiros and opposition linked to the Partido Libertador and Assis Brasil 1930 Revolution Edit In 1930 State President Getulio Vargas after unsuccessfully running in the presidential elections against the candidate of Sao Paulo Julio Prestes led a revolt against the Federal government and succeeded in overthrowing it This eventually led to the Vargas dictatorship in 1937 and the period known as the Estado Novo What is now the Rio Grande do Sul Military Brigade fought on the side of the state leadership and as a result was never reformed In fact the Brigade remains the only state militia in Brazil The Military Police is the federal force that polices in the other states A poignant example of the Brigade s quasi autonomy is the participation of its servicemen in both the coup attempt of 1961 and the military coup in 1964 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop p a 1872434 813 1890897 455 4 11 19001 149 070 2 50 19202 182 713 3 26 19403 320 689 2 12 19504 674 645 3 48 19605 448 823 1 54 19706 755 458 2 17 19807 942 722 1 63 19919 135 479 1 28 200010 181 749 1 21 201010 693 929 0 49 201711 322 895 0 82 source 29 A 19th century house built by Italian immigrants in Caxias do Sul According to the IBGE of 2008 there were 10 860 000 people residing in the state The population density was 38 53 inhabitants per square kilometre 99 8 sq mi Urbanization 81 2004 population growth 1 2 1991 2000 houses 3 464 544 2005 30 The last PNAD National Research for Sample of Domiciles counted 8 776 000 white people 81 1 495 000 brown Multiracial people 14 529 000 black people 5 43 000 Amerindian people 0 4 11 000 Asian people 0 1 31 According to a genetic study from 2013 Brazilians in Rio Grande do Sul have an average of 73 European 14 African and 13 Amerindian ancestry 32 Ethnic groups Edit Ethnicities of Rio Grande do Sul in 2010 33 White 83 22 Pardo mixed race 10 64 Black 5 50 Asian 0 33 Indigenous 0 31 People of Portuguese mostly Azorean background predominate in the coastal region The Southwest on the other hand was originally populated by Pampeano Indians 34 Like the other Gauchos from the La Plata Basin the population there was a result from the mixture of Spanish and Portuguese men with Amerindian women with a possible predominant Spanish ancestry and also a significant African contribution 35 resulting in a population that is 81 20 White 36 These theoretical speculations about Spanish predominance among the population of Southwestern Rio Grande do Sul are widely presumed but they contradict the historical and modern genetic knowledge about the region In fact there was always some Spanish colonial presence there however in practice restricted to Jesuit religious initiatives towards the Amerindian populations which had limited genetic impact in the demographic composition of aboriginal populations On the other hand it is broadly accepted that it is northern Uruguay that always has had an important Luso Brazilian influence 37 which in fact impacts to this day the mixed Spanish Portuguese language of northern Uruguay along the border with Brazil borderlands 38 Kerb by Pedro Weingartner 1892 The work portrays a typical German festival in a rural community German architecture in Nova Petropolis People of German descent predominate in the Sinos Valley Novo Hamburgo Sao Leopoldo Nova Hartz Dois Irmaos Morro Reuter etc and in the center eastern part of the State Santa Cruz do Sul People of Italian descent predominate in the mountains Serra Gaucha Caxias do Sul Bento Goncalves Farroupilha Garibaldi etc The Northern and Northwestern parts of the State also have significant numbers of people of both Italian and German descent There are sizeable communities of Poles and Ukrainians across the state notably in the northwest People of African ancestry are concentrated in the capital city and in some cities in the litoral such as Pelotas and Rio Grande 39 According to Argentine demographer Miguel Angel Garcia Italian immigrants were 60 of the total immigration to Rio Grande do Sul 40 and according to French historian Jean Roche as of 1950 people of German descent made up 21 6 of the state s population 41 Monument in Porto Alegre to honor the Azorean immigrants The region that is now Rio Grande do Sul was originally settled by Amerindian peoples mostly Guarani and Kaingangs and to a lesser extent Charruas and Minuanes 42 European presence in the region started in 1627 with Spanish Jesuits The Jesuits established Indian Reductions in the region those reductions where populated exclusively by Amerindians mainly Guarani and certainly not by Europeans either Spanish or Portuguese Portuguese Jesuits established Indian Reductions in 1687 and dominated the region citation needed Most of the Indians of the region became Catholics and went to live among the Jesuits These reductions were destroyed by the Bandeirantes from Sao Paulo in the 18th century who wanted to enslave the Indians The Portuguese settlement in Rio Grande do Sul was largely increased between 1748 and 1756 with the arrival of two thousand immigrants from the Azores Islands Portugal They settled many parts of the state including the nowadays capital Porto Alegre Blacks were 50 percent of Rio Grande do Sul s population in 1822 This proportion decreased to 25 percent in 1858 and to only 5 2 percent in 2005 Most of them were brought from Angola to work as slaves in the charqueadas German immigrants first arrived to Southern Brazil in 1824 They were attracted to Brazil to protect the country from invasions of the neighboring countries and to populate the empty interior of the southern region The first city to be settled by them was Sao Leopoldo In the next five decades around 28 thousand Germans were brought to the region to work as small farmers in the countryside 43 Italian immigrants started arriving in Rio Grande do Sul in 1875 They were mostly poor peasants from Trentino and Veneto Northern Italy who were attracted to Southern Brazil to get their own farms Italian immigration to the region lasted until 1914 with a total of 100 000 Italians settling there in this period Most of the immigrants worked as small farmers mainly cultivating grapes in the Serra Gaucha part of the state 44 Other European immigrants migrated to Rio Grande do Sul mostly from Eastern Europe The Jewish Colonization Association assisted Russian Jewish immigrants to settle on agricultural land in the state A memoir of one such immigrant community Filipson Memorias da primeira colonia judaica no Rio Grande do Sul Filipson Memories of the First Jewish Colony in Rio Grande do Sul was published by Frida Alexandr in 1967 45 The town of Gramado has occasional snowfalls Guardian Angel Cathedral in Santo Angelo European genomic ancestry predominates throughout Brazil at 80 except for the Southern Region which includes Rio Grande do Sul where it reaches 90 A new portrayal of each ethnicity contribution to the DNA of Brazilians obtained with samples from the five regions of the country has indicated that on average European ancestors are responsible for nearly 80 of the genetic heritage of the population The variation between the regions is small with the possible exception of the South where the European contribution reaches nearly 90 The results published by the scientific magazine American Journal of Human Biology by a team of the Catholic University of Brasilia show that in Brazil physical indicators such as skin colour colour of the eyes and colour of the hair have little to do with the genetic ancestry of each person which has been shown in previous studies 46 As of 2013 there were fewer than 30 000 Nisei in Rio Grande do Sul Japanese immigrant families from Sao Paulo State began arriving in Rio Grande do Sul in the 1930s In 1956 the first 23 official immigrants came to the state and 26 families arrived at Rio Grande in the years from 1956 through 1963 In 2013 Peter B Clarke author of Japanese New Religions in Global Perspective wrote that Nowadays we cannot speak of a Japanese colony in RS 47 Largest cities Edit Largest cities or towns in Rio Grande do Sul 2019 estimative of Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica 48 Rank Pop Rank Pop Porto Alegre Caxias do Sul 1 Porto Alegre 1 483 771 11 Alvorada 210 305 Pelotas Canoas2 Caxias do Sul 510 906 12 Passo Fundo 203 2753 Pelotas 342 405 13 Sapucaia do Sul 141 0754 Canoas 346 616 14 Uruguaiana 126 9705 Santa Maria 282 123 15 Santa Cruz do Sul 130 4166 Gravatai 281 519 16 Cachoeirinha 130 2937 Viamao 255 224 17 Bage 121 1438 Novo Hamburgo 246 748 18 Bento Goncalves 120 4549 Sao Leopoldo 236 835 19 Erechim 105 86210 Rio Grande 211 005 20 Guaiba 98 143 Religion Edit Religion in Rio Grande do Sul 2010 49 50 Catholic Church 68 8 Protestantism 18 3 Spiritism 0 8 Other religions 4 4 Irreligious 5 3 According to the 2010 Brazilian Census most of the population 68 8 is Roman Catholic other religious groups include Protestants or evangelicals 18 3 Spiritists 0 8 Nones 5 3 and people with other religions 4 4 49 50 Education Edit Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Hospital is a nationwide reference it is located in the centre of Porto Alegre Unisinos University in Sao Leopoldo There are more than 100 universities in the state 51 The largest public university is UFRGS and the largest private one is PUCRS Economy Edit Porto Alegre capital of Rio Grande do Sul at night A winery in Bento Goncalves Rio Grande do Sul is the biggest wine producer in Brazil Sheep Farming in Rio Grande do Sul Soybean plantation in Novo Barreiro The industrial sector is the largest component of GDP at 43 followed by the service sector at 41 Agriculture represents 16 of GDP 2004 Rio Grande do Sul exports footwear 18 soybeans 14 tobacco 13 6 vehicles 8 frozen meat 7 2 chemicals 6 8 and leather 5 2002 Share of the Brazilian economy 7 2005 One of the most prosperous Brazilian states Rio Grande do Sul is known especially for its grain production viticulture ranching and for its considerable industrial output In 1827 emigrants from Idar Oberstein discovered the world s most important agate deposit in Rio Grande do Sul As early as 1834 the first delivery of agate from Rio Grande do Sul had been made to Idar Oberstein The Brazilian agate exhibited very even layers much more even than those seen in the local agates This made them especially good for making engraved gems In agriculture the state stands out in the production of soybeans maize wheat rice tobacco grape apple cassava and yerba mate in addition to also producing oat barley orange peach fig tangerine persimmon and strawberry In 2020 the South Region produced 32 of the national total of cereals vegetables and oilseeds There were 77 2 million tons second place in Brazil losing only to the Midwest Rio Grande do Sul 14 3 was the 3rd largest producer in the country 52 Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer of rice in the country with 70 5 of Brazil s production close to 7 3 million tons in 2020 53 52 It is also the largest producer of tobacco in Brazil and is the largest exporter in the world Brazil is the second largest producer in the world and leader in tobacco exports since the 1990s with 98 of Brazilian production being carried out in the South Region 54 55 The state is responsible for 90 of the national production of grapes and produces 90 of the wine produced in the country 85 of the sparkling wine and 90 of the grape juice mainly in the area of Caxias do Sul and surroundings 664 2 thousand tons of grape in 2018 56 57 58 In soy Rio Grande do Sul is the 3rd largest producer in the country with about 16 of national production It produced 19 3 million tons 59 52 In 2017 it was also 3rd largest producer of maize 60 61 62 Rio Grande do Sul is also the largest national producer of wheat with 2 3 million tons in 2019 52 63 64 The South Region is also the largest producer of oats in Brazil In 2019 national production was close to 800 thousand tons being almost all carried out in the South Parana and Rio Grande do Sul 65 66 The three Southern States of the country are responsible for 95 of the national production of apple and Santa Catarina appears at the top of the production list disputing with Rio Grande do Sul Rio Grande do Sul harvests 45 of Brazilian apples and is the largest exporter of apples in the country The region in the vicinity of Vacaria is the highlight it concentrates 88 of the state s production and 37 of the national production 67 68 In cassava production Brazil produced a total of 17 6 million tons in 2018 The state was the 4th largest producer in the country with almost 1 million tons 69 About orange Rio Grande do Sul was the 5th largest producer in Brazil in 2018 with a total of 367 thousand tons 70 Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer of peaches in Brazil with half the volume harvested in Brazil in 2018 71 It is also the largest producer of fig in the country according to data from 2018 72 In 2018 Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd largest producers of tangerine in Brazil Rio Grande do Sul is also responsible for 19 of Brazil s persimmon production being the 2nd largest national producer 73 74 In 2019 in Brazil there was a total production area of around 4 thousand hectares of strawberry Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd largest producer 75 In 2019 Brazil produced about 900 thousand tons of yerba mate annually Parana is the largest producer in volume and Rio Grande do Sul in plantation areas and where the sector is more industrialized According to 2017 data Parana harvested 301 thousand tons of yerba mate by extractive method while Rio Grande do Sul harvested 17 thousand tons On the other hand while the gauchos harvested 302 thousand tons of planted grass the Parana harvested 237 thousand tons in this method The productive potential of yerba mate is still little explored in Brazil with a good part of the harvest carried out by the extractive system and with low levels of productivity However many new producers are adopting more professional and efficient production systems with technical acuity of management and globalized market vision This tends to increase Brazil s export of this product Expointer in Esteio is considered the largest livestock show in Latin America In 2018 the state s cattle herd was 12 5 million head 7th place in the country 6 5 of Brazil s cattle herd 76 In 2019 Rio Grande do Sul produced a total of 4 5 billion liters of milk making it the third largest producer in the country with 13 0 of the country s total 77 In sheep farming in 2017 the South Region was the 2nd largest in the country with 4 2 million heads Rio Grande do Sul has 94 of the country s wool production 78 In pork the 3 southern states are the largest producers in the country Brazil had 41 1 million head in 2017 Rio Grande do Sul 14 6 is the 3rd largest producer 79 80 Vineyards in Flores da Cunha Neugebauer s headquarters in Arroio do Meio Marcopolo S A is a global bus and coach manufacturer with headquarters in Caxias do Sul Gerdau plant in Charqueadas Calcados Beira Rio one of the biggest shoe factories in the country The Brazilian poultry flock in 2018 was of the order of 1 5 billion heads In 2017 the main poultry producing states in Brazil were Parana 25 3 Sao Paulo 14 0 and Rio Grande do Sul 11 0 In terms of chickens in 2017 there were 242 8 million heads in the country Among the states that were the largest producers Sao Paulo led with 21 9 followed by Parana 10 1 and Rio Grande do Sul 8 8 81 In the production of chicken eggs the state ranks fifth in Brazil with 8 of national production There were 354 million dozen in 2018 82 The South region was the main producer of honey in the country in 2017 accounting for 39 7 of the national total Rio Grande do Sul was the largest producer in the country with 15 2 79 Regarding mining the state is a major producer of gemstones Brazil is the world s largest producer of amethyst and agate and Rio Grande do Sul is the largest producer in the country Agate has local extraction since 1830 The largest producer of amethyst in Brazil is the city of Ametista do Sul This stone was very rare and expensive worldwide until the discovery of large deposits in Brazil causing its value to drop considerably There is also some jasper and opal in the state 83 84 85 86 87 Fertilizer industry in Rio Grande Rice farming in Mariana Pimentel About industry Rio Grande do Sul had an industrial GDP of R 82 1 billion in 2017 equivalent to 6 9 of the national industry It employs 762 045 workers in the industry The main industrial sectors are Construction 18 2 Food 15 4 Industrial Public Utility Services such as Electricity and Water 9 8 Chemicals 6 8 and Machinery and Equipment 6 6 These 5 sectors concentrate 56 8 of the state s industry 88 In the automotive sector the state has a GM plant 89 The leather footwear sector Footwear industry stands out particularly in Novo Hamburgo Sapiranga and Campo Bom and in virtually all other municipalities in Vale dos Sinos in 2019 Brazil produced 972 million pairs Exports were around 10 reaching almost 125 million pairs Brazil is in the 4th position among the world producers behind China who produces more than 10 billion pairs India and Vietnam and in 11th place among the biggest exporters The largest pole of production in Brazil is located here The Brazilian state that most exports the product is Rio Grande do Sul in 2019 it exported US 448 35 million The majority of the product goes to United States Argentina and France Domestic consumption absorbs a large part of production The state has or created some of the most important factories in Brazil in the sector 90 91 In Food industry In 2019 Brazil was the 2nd largest exporter of processed foods in the world with a value of U 34 1 billion in exports The Brazilian food and beverage industry s revenue in 2019 was R 699 9 billion 9 7 of the country s Gross Domestic Product In 2015 the industrial food and beverage sector in Brazil comprised 34 800 companies not counting bakeries the vast majority of which were small These companies employed more than 1 600 000 workers making the food and beverage industry the largest employer in the manufacturing industry There are around 570 large companies in Brazil which concentrate a good part of the total industry revenue Rio Grande do Sul created food companies of national importance such as the Neugebauer chocolate factory Vinicola Aurora and Vinicola Salton two of the largest wineries in the country and Camil Alimentos which owns the brand Acucar Uniao the most famous sugar brand in the country Arroz Carretero one of the most famous rice brands in Brazil among others 92 93 94 The mechanical and metallurgical industry also reach considerable expression especially in Porto Alegre Novo Hamburgo Sao Leopoldo and Canoas in addition to Gravatai Sapucaia do Sul Esteio and Sapiranga which have large companies in the sector and which also belong to the Metropolitan Region of Porto Alegre These centers are joined by Sao Jeronimo which houses the Charqueadas steel plant The steel mill Acos Finos Piratini is located in Charqueadas which belongs to Gerdau It is geared mainly to serve the automotive industry In the metallurgical business the state has one of the most famous companies in the country Tramontina originally from Rio Grande do Sul and famous manufacturer of knives pans shovels and various utensils which has more than 8 500 employees and 10 manufacturing units Other famous companies in the state are Marcopolo a manufacturer of bus bodies which had a market value of R 2 782 billion in 2015 and Randon a group of 9 companies specialized in solutions for the transportation which brings together manufacturers of vehicles auto parts and road equipment employs around 11 000 people and recorded gross sales in 2017 of R 4 2 billion Another industrial area is the so called old colonization region in which the municipalities of Caxias do Sul Garibaldi Bento Goncalves Flores da Cunha Farroupilha and Santa Cruz do Sul are integrated The manufacturing activity is marked by the production of wine and processing of agropastoral products such as leather lard maize wheat and tobacco In the rest of the state there are several dispersed industrial centers all linked to the processing of agropastoral raw materials In this group Erechim Passo Fundo Santa Maria Santana do Livramento Rosario do Sul Pelotas Rio Grande and Bage stand out Statistics Edit Vehicles 4 367 980 March 2008 Mobile phones 12 3 million June 2008 Telephones 3 million April 2008 Cities 496 2007 95 Infrastructure EditHighways Edit Main article List of state highways in Rio Grande do Sul BR 290 highway near Porto Alegre BR 116 Highway in Ivoti The state has 153 960 km of highways under national state or municipal jurisdiction The main highways are BR 101 BR 116 BR 153 BR 158 BR 163 BR 285 BR 287 BR 290 BR 293 BR 386 BR 392 and BR 471 After decades of meager investments by successive State Governments Rio Grande do Sul currently has a deficient road network and one of the worst in the southern half of the country in 2020 there were still 54 cities without asphalt access Sao Paulo Rio de Janeiro Santa Catarina and Mato Grosso do Sul had 100 of cities with asphalt access at the same time Parana and Minas Gerais had almost 100 96 97 98 99 The State also has few duplicated highways roughly in the vicinity of the capital Porto Alegre most of which belong to the Federal Government despite the large number of state highways the State Government did little in this field 100 The situation only began to change in 2019 when the State carried out an economic and financial reorganization plan and launched a specific program aimed at recovering and evolving the state s road network This year 62 municipalities still did not have access to asphalt the project was to arrive in 2023 with 22 cities without access Highway concessions held by Rio Grande do Sul such as BR 287 and BR 386 carried out at the same time aim to double the granted portions of these highways by 2035 101 102 103 Currently 211 km of the BR 116 between Guaiba and Pelotas are being duplicated and in 2022 there were already 148 km duplicated 104 Ports Edit Port of Rio Grande The Port of Rio Grande is of great importance for Mercosur and also the main point of multimodality in the state causing part of the road and rail system to focus on the Port of Rio Grande The main ports are Port of Rio Grande Port of Porto Alegre Port of Pelotas and Port of Estrela The port terminals of Rio Grande Porto Alegre and Pelotas handled in 2021 47 6 million tons of cargo 45 18 million in the Port of Rio Grande alone 105 106 International airports Edit Porto Alegre Edit Sunset at Salgado Filho International Airport With 37 6 thousand square meters of constructed area and four levels the passenger terminal at Salgado Filho International Airport can receive 28 large airplanes simultaneously The terminal has 32 check in counters ten boarding bridges nine elevators and ten escalators It has a totally automated aircraft movement control center and the main spaces are air conditioned The apron surfaced with prestressed concrete can serve jumbo jets like the Boeing 747 400 The garage structure has eight levels 44 thousand square meters and 1 440 parking spaces Another terminal with 15 thousand square meters and capacity for 1 5 million passengers a year serves general executive and third tier aviation conventional piston engine and turboprop planes Porto Alegre Airport was the first one administered by Infraero to have integrated check in This service offers flexibility in use of terminal facilities and installations enabling carriers to access their own data centers via shared use computers from any check in counter position This makes it much easier to allocate counter space according to demand fluctuations making for less idle space The Aeroshopping area a center for commerce and leisure operates 24 hours a day with shops services a food court along with a triplex cinema the first to be established at a Brazilian airport Salgado Filho International Airport also has an air cargo terminal built in 1974 with 9 500 thousand square meters of area and capacity to handle 1 500 tons of export cargo and 900 tons of imports each month The average daily movement arrivals and departures is 174 aircraft flying scheduled routes connecting Porto Alegre directly or indirectly to all the country s other major cities as well as smaller cities in the interior of the states of the South Region and Sao Paulo There are also international flights with direct connections to cities of the Southern Cone Pelotas Edit The Pelotas International Airport is commonly used by the Brazilian Air Force as the last stop in Brazil on its flights to the Brazilian Antarctic Base Bage Edit Comandante Gustavo Kraemer Airport opened on July 5 1946 This airport came under Infraero administration on October 27 1980 It is located on the rural outskirts of Bage 60 km 37 mi from the Uruguayan border and 380 km 236 mi from Porto Alegre Comandante Gustavo Kraemer Airport does not operate with scheduled commercial flights There are two daily flights carrying bank pouches as well as air taxi services and executive jets Most of the airport s users are businesspeople from the central part of Brazil who have interests in the region in breeding thoroughbred English and Arabian horses cattle ranching fruit growing wine making wood pulp and power generation Uruguaiana Edit Located on the border with Argentina across the Uruguay River from the Argentine city of Paso de los Libres Uruguaiana is considered the major inland port in Latin America thanks to its strategic position with the countries of Mercosur Rubem Berta International Airport however has only one flight on Azul Brazilian Airlines to Porto Alegre a situation Infraero intends to change as was confirmed in an official visit to the airport in December 2004 With more than 700 thousand square meters of constructed area it is the largest airport in the interior of the state of Rio Grande do Sul Great Porto Alegre Metro System in Sao Leopoldo There are two highways BR 290 and BR 472 running near the airport besides a railroad line about 2 500 meters from the terminal Located 9 km 6 mi from the city center this airport is at an elevation of 78 meters and the average annual temperature is 20C with a good deal of variation from summer to winter Located 630 km 391 mi from the state capital Porto Alegre Uruguaiana was founded on May 29 1746 and has a current population of 126 936 Farming and ranching are the main economic activities of the region which has 1 509 rural properties National airports Edit Caxias do Sul Edit Caxias do Sul Airport Hugo Cantergiani Airport CXJ SBCX serves a vast region of important economical and touristic counties in the vicinities of Caxias do Sul totalling 34 municipalities in this area of the Serra Gaucha It is located at an altitude of 754 m 2 474 ft as has one concrete runway 15 33 with the length of 2 000 m 6 562 ft although only 1 650 m are usable if landing on runway 15 It is served on a daily basis by GOL and Azul airlines linking Caxias do Sul to Sao Paulo It is equipped with a VASIS visual approach aid and is also certified for IFR approaches References to these informations are published in the Portuguese version of this site Energy Edit Osorio wind farm the largest wind power park in Latin America In 2021 Rio Grande do Sul had around 7 2 GW of installed electrical power a relatively low number compared to the country s total which was around 170 GW at the time Of the total 80 6 came from renewable sources 49 corresponded to hydroelectric plants 19 5 to wind energy and 8 2 to photovoltaic solar energy The state has high potential for wind power installation due to the average wind speed being one of the highest in the country There are currently several projects for new wind farms in progress in addition to investments in the state s power transmission lines which were limited Most projects for offshore wind energy in Brazil in 2021 were in Rio Grande do Sul with installation scheduled for 2030 107 108 109 110 In March 2022 Rio Grande do Sul was the 3rd Brazilian state with the most solar energy installed in the individual distributed micro generation modality 111 The production of crude mineral coal in Brazil was 13 6 million tons in 2007 Santa Catarina produced 8 7 Mt million tons Rio Grande do Sul 4 5 Mt and Parana 0 4 Mt Brazil has reserves of peat lignite and hard coal Coal totals 32 billion tons of reserves and is mainly in Rio Grande do Sul 89 25 of the total The Candiota Deposit in Rio Grande do Sul alone has 38 of all national coal As it s a coal of inferior quality it s used only in the generation of thermoelectric energy and at the site of the deposit The oil crisis in the 1970s led the Brazilian government to create the Energy Mobilization Plan with intense research to discover new coal reserves The Geological Survey of Brazil through works carried out in Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina greatly increased the reserves of coal previously known between 1970 and 1986 mainly between 1978 and 1983 Good quality coal suitable for use in metallurgy and in large volume seven billion tons was then discovered in several deposits in Rio Grande do Sul Morungava Chico Loma Santa Teresinha but at relatively great depths up to 1 200 m which has hindered its use until now In 2011 coal accounted for only 5 6 of the energy consumed in Brazil but it is an important strategic source which can be activated when for example the water levels in the dams are very low reducing excessively the supply of hydroelectric power 112 113 Culture EditMain category Culture in Rio Grande do Sul Typical dance in a CTG Center of Traditions Chimarrao is a traditional drink made by soaking dried leaves of the holly species Ilex paraguariensis in hot water Grape Festival in Caxias do Sul A typical meal in Rio Grande do Sul with wine bread cheese pasta with beef and salami The state of Rio Grande do Sul is renowned as one of the most culturally rich states of Brazil Rio Grande s music is a blend of many styles most a continuum of rhythms found in neighboring countries including the Chamame Milonga Polca and Chacarera Modern gaucho music or tche music has been popular since the late 1980s The inhabitants of the state are known in the country for drinking chimarrao a local version of the mate drunk in neighbouring Uruguay and Argentina and for consuming churrasco very regularly a practice common due to the abundant sources of high quality meat even going so far as considering this one of the most important elements of everyday life Porto Alegre is home to Sport Club Internacional and Gremio Foot Ball Porto Alegrense They are arch rivals one of the biggest rivalries in Brazil Each region of the state has its own cultural background In the pampas Southwest the culture is still largely influenced by the old Gauchos Gaucho is a term that can describe anyone born in the state of Rio Grande do Sul However it is also used to describe the 19th century rural workers of the region Other parts of the state have a slightly different culture influenced mainly by German or Italian immigrants After some generations the descendants of immigrants were integrated in the local society even though their cultural influences are still strong mostly in the countryside Despite these differences the Gaucho people maintain a particular zeal for their culture and its variations Although the Gaucho culture and its Portuguese based language prevails in Rio Grande do Sul the southernmost state of Brazil sharing many of its folklore characteristics with neighboring horseback livestock raising grassland centered cultures such as found in Uruguay and in Argentina the state also has other strong albeit less prominent cultural focus areas These are notably the German Brazilian cultural identity and the Riograndenser Hunsruckisch language the estimated number of speakers are around 1 500 000 spoken in the state since 1824 it received official recognition by the state House of Representatives in 2012 by unanimous vote Also as the result of European immigration stated in the 19th century the state has an Italian culture and language of its own the Talian language a Veneto based language dialect spoken mostly in the highlands region at the so called Old Italian Colonies in the upper state see Italian Brazilian However there are many other much smaller cultural minorities in the state for example the Afro Brazilian community the Guarani and Kaingang 114 indigenous peoples also Pomeranian Polish German Jewish etc However these three are the predominant cultural expressions found in the state each with living linguistic expressions which attest to their existence Tourism and recreation Edit Guarita Beach in Torres Lago Negro dark lake in Gramado Enotourism in Bento Goncalves High end tourism is very popular in the Germanesque cities of Gramado and Canela their cold weather is among their attractions for internal tourism Tourism is also high in the wine regions of the state principally Caxias do Sul and Bento Goncalves The pampas of the native Brazilian Gaucho are both a national and international curiosity to tourists and their customs are alive in the capital city of Porto Alegre as well as in the cities of the interior or western Rio Grande do Sul such as Santa Maria and Passo Fundo The state is also home to the historic Sao Miguel das Missoes the ruins of an 18th century Jesuit Mission The state of Rio Grande do Sul and its cities have developed a series scenic routes to appeal to tourists The Rota Romantica is a popular scenic drive that exhibits the diverse Germanic culture of the mountainous regions of the state referred to as the Serra Gaucha One can visit the state s Italian settlements through Caminhos da Colonia tour the wine country through the Wine and Grapes Route and visit a subsection of the Rota Romantica called the Regiao das Hortensias the region filled with blue hydrangea flowers each spring In the far western area of the state are the remnants of Brazil s 17th century Jesuit missions or reductions aldeias to the Guarani Indians Of all the ruins left behind by the vanished Guarani Missions the most significant one is Sao Miguel or Sao Miguel Arcanjo located nearby the present city of Santo Angelo There is an ongoing Light and Sound or Som e Luz in Portuguese show presented at the ruins of the Sao Miguel church Language EditAs in all Brazil Portuguese is the main spoken language A few expressions of Spanish origin are common such as gracias instead of obrigado or the vocative tche etc due to the proximity with Argentina and Uruguay and their common Gaucho past Also a few words of German origin particularly referring to cuisine have entered the vocabulary such as chimia from schmier and cuca from Kuchen Words of Guarani language origin also make up the vocabulary an example being the largely used word guri meaning boy The Gauchos are also famous by their use of the pronoun tu instead of voce the latter being the formal second person singular noun and the first being the informal noun equivalent In the traditional Gaucho dialect of the Pampas the verb is conjugated correctly in the second person singular just like the European Portuguese tu cantas tu bates tu partes tu poes In the colloquial Portuguese of Porto Alegre however the verb is conjugated in the second person as in the third person tu canta tu bate tu parte tu poe 115 Gaucho Portuguese phonology Edit Phonemes of Porto alegrense Portuguese Edit Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Labiovelar Velar Uvular GlottalNasal m n ȷ w ŋ ɰ Stop p b t d kʷ ɡʷ k ɡFricative f v s z ʃ ʒ x ʁ h ɦAffricate tʃ dʒLateral l lʲApproximant Flap ɾ j wAlthough this process is very common in the Southeast in Gaucho Portuguese the letters s and z are never pronounced as palato alveolar consonants in coda position e g pasto pasture is ˈpaʃtu in Rio de Janeiro but ˈpastu in Porto Alegre In Rio Grande do Sul as in most of Brazil the letters t and d are pronounced as palato alveolar affricate consonants when immediately succeeded by the vowel i a process very similar to Russian palatalization and which however does not happen in the varieties of the Pampas Moreover the unstressed e and o are often reduced into ɪ and ʊ respectively Therefore in Porto Alegre the unstressed te syllables are pronounced tʃi for example while in the Pampas they are usually pronounced tɪ Porto Alegre antigamente ɐ n ˌtʃiɡaˈmeȷ tʃʲ or ɐ n ˌtʃiɡaˈmentʃʲ Gaucho Pampas antigamente ɐ ˌtʃiɡaˈme nte compare Spanish antiguamente an t iɣ waˈmẽ n t e The dialect of the Pampas had suffered a stronger influence of Spanish language while the dialect of Porto Alegre suffers modern influences of the Southeastern varieties Also the vowel nasalization in Porto alegrense Portuguese is far different from that seen in French for example In French the nasalization extends uniformly through the entire vowel In Porto Alegre the nasalization begins almost imperceptibly and then gets far stronger in the end of the vowel therefore being closer to the nasalization of Hindi Urdu phonology see Anusvara In some cases the nasal archiphoneme actually represents the addition of a nasal consonant like m n ŋ ȷ w ɰ manta ˈmɐ ntɐ tampa ˈtɐ mpɐ banco ˈbɐ ŋku bem bẽȷ bom boʊ or ˈboɰ or ˈboŋ pan ˈpɐ ɰ or ˈpɐ ŋ It is also noteworthy that in everyday speech many unstressed vowels are not fully pronounced as they are supposed to be For example toque ˈtɔkʲ mente ˈmẽȷ tʃ pouco ˈpokʊ Essentially the vowels e and i are both reduced and devoiced or completely deleted in word final position and sometimes also when unstressed and between consonants always palatalizing the previous consonant The vowels o and u are also reduced and devoiced to ʊ analogously to what happens in Japanese see Japanese phonology Devoicing More rarely a may become ɐ as well Example Edit Municipalities that the Talian is co official in Rio Grande do Sul highlighted in red Bento Goncalves 116 Caxias do Sul 117 Flores da Cunha 118 Nova Roma do Sul 119 120 and Serafina Correa 121 Dom Sebastiao I era o decimo sexto Rei de Portugal e setimo da Dinastia de Avis Era neto do rei Joao III tornou se herdeiro do trono depois da morte do seu pai o principe Joao de Portugal duas semanas antes do seu nascimento e rei com apenas tres anos em 1557 Em virtude de ser um herdeiro tao esperado para dar continuidade a Dinastia de Avis ficou conhecido como O Desejado alternativamente e tambem memorado como O Encoberto ou O Adormecido devido a lenda que se refere ao seu regresso numa manha de nevoeiro para salvar a Nacao ˈdoʊ sebasʃiˈɐ ʊ pɾiˈmeɪ ɾʊ ˈɛɾɐʊ ˈdɛsimʊ ˈsestʊ ˈhej dʒi poɾtuˈɡaw i ˈsɛtʃimʊ da dʒinasˈʃia dʒi ˈavis ɛɾɐ ˈnɛtʊ dʊ ˈheɪ ʒʊˈɐ ʊ teɾˈseɪ ɾʊ toɾˈnoʊ sjeɾˈdeɪ ɾʊ dʊ ˈtɾonʊ deˈpojz da ˈmɔɾtʃi dʊ sew ˈpaɪ ʊ ˈpɾinsipi ʒʊˈɐ ʊ dʒi poɾtuˈɡaʊ ˈdu as seˈmɐ nɐs ˈɐ tʃis dʊ sew nasiˈmentʊ i ˈhej kũw aˈpenɐs ˈtɾez ˈɐ nʊs ẽȷ ˈmiw kiˈȷ entʊz i siŋˈkwentɐɪ ˈsɛtʃi ẽȷ viɾˈtudʒi dʒi ˈseɾ ũw eɾˈdeɪ ɾʊ tɐ ʊ ɪspeˈɾadʊ paɾɐ ˈdaɾ kontʃinwiˈdadʒ a dʒinasˈʃia dʒi ˈavis fiˈkoʊ koȷ eˈsidʊ ˈkomʊ ʊ dezeˈʒadʊ aʊ ˈteɾnaˈtʃivaˈmẽȷ tʃ ˈɛ tɐ mˈbẽȷ memoˈɾadʊ ˈkomʊ ʊ ẽȷ koˈbɛɾtʊ ˈoʊ ʊ aˈdoɾmeˈsidʊ deˈvidwa ˈlenda ki si heˈfɛɾjaʊ ˈseʊ heˈɡɾɛsʊ ˈnũma mɐ ˈȷ ɐ dʒi ˈnevʊˈejɾʊ ˈpaɾa saʊ ˈvaɾ a naˈsɐ ʊ OBS The pronunciation may be subject to free variation source source Native Portuguese speaker from Porto Alegre Rio Grande do Sul reading the above paragraph Minority languages Edit Minority languages spoken in Rio Grande do Sul include Indigenous languages Guarani Kaingang etc and European derived languages Talian Riograndenser Hunsruckisch East Pomeranian dialect of Low German Yiddish and Polish Most of the German dialects speakers in southern Brazil spoke or eventually adopted Hunsruckisch so that it became the most commonly used German dialect in this part of the world and is still spoken by many people today also referred to as Riograndenser Hunsruckisch to differentiate it from the Hunsruckisch spoken in Germany In its 180 years of history Riograndenser Hunsruckisch has been influenced by Portuguese and by other German dialects such as Pfalzisch Talian is a Brazilian variety of the Venetian language also often called Veneto for that reason All minority languages in southern Brazil have experienced a significant degree of decline in the last few decades Sport Edit Estadio Beira Rio one of the venues for the 2014 FIFA World Cup Arena do Gremio Rio Grande do Sul currently has eight football teams belonging to the divisions of the Brazilian Football Championship Internacional Gremio Juventude Caxias Brasil de Pelotas Lajeadense and Ypiranga Sport Club Rio Grande from the municipality of Rio Grande is the oldest in Brazil and currently plays in the Campeonato Gaucho of the Second Division 122 123 Rio Grande do Sul is also a national and world reference in futsal with teams such as Inter Ulbra in Porto Alegre ACBF in Carlos Barbosa Atlantico in Erechim Ulbra in Canoas Assoeva in Venancio Aires and Enxuta in Caxias do Sul The municipality of Carlos Barbosa is considered the futsal capital in Brazil 124 125 In the state the following Olympic medalists were born Mayra Aguiar and Daniel Cargnin judo 126 127 Fernando Scheffer swimming 128 Andre Johannpeter equestrian 129 Andre Heller Gustavo Endres Murilo Endres Renan Dal Zotto Paulao Fernanda Garay Carol Albuquerque Eder Janelson Jorge Edson Lucao Marcus Vinicius and Thiago Alves volleyball 130 131 132 Also from the state is Thomaz Koch considered one of the greatest tennis players in the history of Brazil 133 134 and Henrique Mecking considered the greatest Brazilian chess player of all time who came to be the 3rd best in the world 135 136 in addition to World Championships medalists such as Babi and Deonise in handball 137 Joao Derly and Maria Portela in judo 138 Daiane dos Santos in gymnastics 139 and Samuel de Bona in the aquatic marathon 140 Notes Edit In the frontier dialects it may be produced as riw ˈɡɾɐ de do ˈsuɫ The European Portuguese pronunciation is ˈʁi u ˈɣɾɐ d ɨ du ˈsul References Edit 2020 IBGE Estimates Estimates of Resident Population in Brazil Federative Units and Municipalities PDF in Portuguese IBGE gov br Retrieved August 28 2020 Radar IDHM evolucao do IDHM e de seus indices componentes no periodo de 2012 a 2017 PDF in Portuguese PNUD Brasil Archived from the original PDF on July 15 2019 Retrieved April 18 2019 Rio Grande do Sul Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on August 23 2022 Rio Grande Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved May 16 2019 Os estados mais e menos perigosos do Brasil in Portuguese exame abril com br November 24 2016 Retrieved March 1 2020 Nicola Pamplona November 17 2017 Apenas sete Estados tiveram queda no desemprego no terceiro trimestre in Portuguese folha uol com br Retrieved March 1 2020 a b c d e One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Rio Grande do Sul Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 357 359 in Portuguese Frio de renguear cusco Archived May 27 2008 at the Wayback Machine Pagina Cambara do Sul On line Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 7 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 8 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 8 9 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 9 Luddock John Notes on Rio de Janeiro and the Southern Parts of Brazil cited by Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 10 a b Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 10 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 10 11 a b Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 11 Cardoso Fernando Henrique Capitalismo e Escravidao no Brasil Meridional Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 14 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 15 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho pp 15 16 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 16 footnote Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 16 http www momentodeuruguaiana com br menu memoria memoria187 htm permanent dead link Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho pp 16 17 quoting for the figures the Almanak do Ministerio da Guerra no anno de 1889 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho pp 17 18 p 32 1 PDF Retrieved August 24 2014 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 19 21 Love Joseph O Regionalismo Gaucho p 22 24 IGBE Source PNAD Sistema IBGE de Recuperacao Automatica SIDRA PDF in Portuguese Rio Grande do Sul Brazil IBGE 2008 ISBN 978 85 240 3919 5 Retrieved August 24 2014 Saloum de Neves Manta Fernanda September 20 2013 Revisiting the Genetic Ancestry of Brazilians Using Autosomal AIM Indels PLOS ONE 8 9 e75145 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 875145S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0075145 PMC 3779230 PMID 24073242 Tabela 2094 Populacao residente por cor ou raca e religiao sidra ibge gov br Retrieved April 25 2021 Telmo Remiao Moure Os grupos indigenas e sua distribuicao Andrea Rita Marrero Historia genetica dos gauchos dinamica populacional do Sul do Brasil IBGE Census 2000 Tabela 2094 Populacao residente por cor ou raca e religiao Mesorregiao Geografica Sudoeste Rio grandense RS Eliana Rosa Sturza Linguas de fronteira o desconhecido territorio das praticas linguisticas nas fronteiras brasileiras Na fronteira Brasil Uruguai a transgressao dos limites ocorreu sobretudo para dentro do territorio uruguaio Primeiro se instalaram os portugueses e posteriormente os brasileiros de tal modo que isso possibilitou a manutencao da lingua portuguesa e determinou a sua importancia no proprio processo de ocupacao da regiao norte do Uruguai Michael T Judd O dialeto fronteirico do Uruguai origens investigacoes e oportunidades Archived February 27 2016 at the Wayback Machine RS VIRTUAL O Rio Grande do Sul na Internet Historia Colonizacao Negros A historia dos gauchos sem historia Archived September 29 2007 at the Wayback Machine Immigrazione Italiana nell America del Sud Argentina Uruguay e Brasile Neiva Otero Schaeffer Os alemaes no Rio Grande do Sul in Os Alemaes no Sul do Brasil Editora Ulbra 2004 2004 p 170 Pagina do Gaucho Indios Os grupos indigenas e sua distribuicao in Portuguese Paginadogaucho com br Retrieved August 24 2014 Germans Archived July 16 2007 at the Wayback Machine Italians Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine Igel Regina March 1 2009 Frida Alexandr Jewish Women A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia Jewish Women s Archive Retrieved December 8 2016 http www1 folha uol com br folha ciencia ult306u633465 shtml bare URL Clarke Peter B Japanese New Religions in Global Perspective Routledge November 5 2013 ISBN 1136828656 9781136828652 p 114 Panorama do estado do Rio Grande do Sul in Portuguese Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica IBGE Retrieved May 13 2020 a b Censo 2010 IBGE a b Analise dos Resultados IBGE Censo Demografico 2010 Caracteristicas gerais da populacao religiao e pessoas com deficiencia PDF Universidades no Rio Grande do Sul Seruniversitario com br Retrieved August 24 2014 a b c d IBGE preve safra recorde de graos em 2020 Safra do arroz deve atingir mais de 1 14 milhao de toneladas em Santa Catarina Regiao Sul e responsavel por 98 da producao de tabaco no Brasil Noticia Regiao Sul devera produzir 760 mil toneladas de fumo em 2008 2009 Portal do Agronegocio Archived from the original on May 22 2011 Retrieved September 3 2009 Regiao Sul e responsavel por mais de 90 das uvas produzidas para processamento no Brasil Archived from the original on June 9 2020 Retrieved July 21 2020 Vale do Rio do Peixe produz 86 da uva em SC Producao de uva no Rio Grande do Sul cai quase 40 frente a 2018 Confira como esta a colheita da soja em cada estado do pais Quatro estados concentram quase 70 da producao de graos do pais Producao de Milho no Nordeste Producao de graos cresce 14 e Piaui se consolida como 3º maior produtor do Nordeste Rio Grande do Sul deve superar Parana na producao de trigo em 2019 BRASIL IMPORTACAO DE TRIGO 2019 POR PAIS Em abril IBGE preve alta de 2 2 na safra de graos de 2019 Alternativa ao trigo cevada ganha espaco no Sul e projeta producao recorde Safra da maca deve render 600 mil toneladas em Santa Catarina Qualidade da fruta marca abertura da colheita da maca e da uva no RS Producao brasileira de mandioca em 2018 Producao brasileira de laranja em 2018 Como plantar pessego Conheca o caminho do figo brasileiro do campo ao Canada Producao brasileira de tangerina em 2018 Caqui Panorama nacional da producao Qual o panorama da producao de morango no Brasil O RS possui 6 5 do rebanho bovino do Brasil Bovinocultura de Leite PPM 2017 Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados a b PPM 2017 Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados REGIAO SUL DO BRASIL E O MAIOR CENTRO PRODUTIVO DE PROTEINA ANIMAL DO MUNDO PPM 2017 Rebanho bovino predomina no Centro Oeste e Mato Grosso lidera entre os estados O RS e o 4º maior produtor de aves e de ovos do Brasil Algumas Gemas Classicas Rio Grande do Sul o maior exportador de pedras preciosas do Brasil Os alemaes e as pedras preciosas gauchas Maior pedra de agua marinha e brasileira e ficara exposta nos EUA Pedras de ametista sao atrativos para turistas em cidade no Norte do RS July 4 2013 Rio Grande do Sul Industry Profile O novo mapa das montadoras Abicalcados apresenta Relatorio Setorial 2019 Exportacao de Calcados Saiba mais A industria de alimentos e bebidas na sociedade brasileira atual Faturamento da industria de alimentos cresceu 6 7 em 2019 Industria de alimentos e bebidas faturou R 699 9 bi em 2019 February 18 2020 Source IBGE No RS 54 municipios ainda nao tem acesso asfaltico e crianca com poeira buracos e dificuldades necessario Quatro cidades do Parana nao tem acessos por rodovias estaduais asfaltadas enfrentam lama e transtornos Moradores de cidades sem ligacao asfaltica vivencia por lama e poeira Santa Catarina tem agora acesso asfaltado a todas as 295 cidades Mapa rodoviario do Rio Grande do Sul em 2021 Governo libera R 37 milhoes para acessos asfalticos em oito municipios Como esta a BR 386 nove meses depois da concessao para a iniciativa privada Governador assina contrato de concessao que garantira duplicacao e investimentos de R 2 7 bilhoes na RSC 287 DNIT libera mais 11 3 km de trecho duplicado na BR 116 RS Porto RS Portos do RS movimentam mais de 47 milhoes de toneladas em carga e fecham 2021 com recorde Fazemos grande esforco para ampliar geracao de energia renovavel no RS destaca governador em painel nacional EoLICA VAI REVOLUCIONAR MATRIZ ENERGETICA DO RS RS atrai maior numero de empresas no pais para explorar energia eolica em alto mar RS em numeros Brasil ultrapassa marca de 10 GW em micro e minigeracao distribuida Carvao Mineral Carvao mineral no Brasil e no mundo Terra Indigena Guarita Bem Vindo a Terra Indigena Guarita Tenente Portela Rio Grande do Sul Brasil Archived April 10 2013 at archive today DICIONARIO DE PORTO ALEGRES Luis Augusto Fischer L amp PM Pocket A maior colecao de livros de bolso do Brasil in Portuguese Rio Grande do Sul Brazil L amp PM 2007 ISBN 978 85 254 1681 0 Retrieved August 24 2014 Camara Bento Projeto do Executivo e aprovado e Talian se torna a lingua co oficial Lei confirma o Talian como segunda lingua oficial de Caxias do Sul Talian e lingua cooficial de Flores da Cunha Lei Nº 1310 de 16 de outubro de 2015 Dispoe sobre a cooficializacao da lingua do talian a lingua portuguesa no municipio de Nova Roma do Sul O Talian agora e a lingua co oficial de Nova Roma do Sul municipio de Nova Roma do Sul Vereadores aprovam o talian como lingua co oficial do municipio Retrieved August 21 2011 Gremio e pentacampeao gaucho e reduz vantagem de titulos do Inter veja o ranking completo Gremio supera Inter e tera maior jejum de titulos grandes da historia do RS Veja os times com mais titulos da Liga Nacional de Futsal Carlos Barbosa penta Jaragua tetra confira todos os campeoes da Liga Nacional de Futsal LNF Mayra Aguiar COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Daniel Cargnin COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Fernando Scheffer COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Andre Johannpeter COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Andre Heller COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Gustavo Endres COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Murilo Endres COB Retrieved September 2 2022 10 maiores tenistas brasileiros Yahoo Esportes Retrieved September 2 2022 Especial 20 anos os maiores brasileiros do tenis Tenisbrasil Retrieved September 2 2022 Conheca o curriculo de Mequinho O melhor enxadrista do Brasil Diario de Cuiaba Retrieved September 2 2022 Mequinho 1º brasileiro grande mestre de xadrez Folha de Sao Paulo Retrieved September 2 2022 E campeao Brasil vence a Servia e conquista seu primeiro titulo mundial Globoesporte Retrieved September 2 2022 A trajetoria do bicampeao mundial Sogipa Retrieved September 2 2022 Daiane dos Santos COB Retrieved September 2 2022 Grandes momentos de 2013 Samuel de Bona Rede do Esporte Retrieved September 2 2022 External links EditRio Grande do Sul at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity in Portuguese Official website Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rio Grande do Sul Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rio Grande do Sul amp oldid 1131343760, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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