1933 in Brazil
Appearance
1933 in Brazil |
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Flag |
21 stars (1889–1960) |
Timeline of Brazilian history |
Vargas Era |
Events in the year 1933 in Brazil.
Incumbents
[edit]Federal government
[edit]- President: Getúlio Vargas (Head of the Provisional Government)
- Vice President: none
Governors
[edit]- Alagoas: Louis de France Albuquerque (till 10 January); Alfonso de Carvalho (from 10 January)
- Amazonas: Álvaro Botelho Maia (till 10 October); Nélson de Melo (from 10 October)
- Bahia: Juracy Magalhães
- Ceará: Roberto Carneiro de Mendonça
- Goiás:
- till 31 July: Pedro Ludovico Teixeira
- 31 July - 8 September: José Carvalho dos Santos Azevedo
- from 8 September: Pedro Ludovico Teixeira
- Maranhão:
- till 10 February: Lourival Seroa da Mota
- 10 February - 30 April: Américo Wanick
- 30 April - 29 June: Álvaro Saldanha
- from 29 June: Antônio Martins de Almeida
- Mato Grosso: Leônidas Antero de Matos
- Minas Gerais:
- till 5 September: Olegário Maciel
- 5 September - 15 December: Gustavo Capanema
- from 15 December: Benedito Valadares
- Pará: Joaquim de Magalhães Barata
- Paraíba: Gratuliano da Costa Brito
- Paraná: Manuel Ribas
- Pernambuco: Carlos de Lima Cavalcanti
- Piauí: Landry Sales
- Rio Grande do Norte:
- till 2 August: Bertino Dutra da Silva
- from 2 August: Mario Leopoldo Pereira da Camera
- Rio Grande do Sul: José Antônio Flores da Cunha
- Santa Catarina:
- São Paulo:
- Sergipe:
Vice governors
[edit]Events
[edit]- 19 April – Octávio Barbosa marries Beatriz de Lima Viana, at Belo Horizonte.
- 1 June – The Federal University of São Paulo is founded in São Paulo, Brazil.[1]
- 20 July – New airline Aerolloyd Iguassu goes into operation, with flights between Curitiba and São Paulo.[2]
- 10 October – The Anti-war Treaty of Non-aggression and Conciliation, an inter-American treaty, is signed in Rio de Janeiro by representatives of Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Paraguay and Uruguay.[3]
- 24 October – The city of Goiânia, capital of Goiás, is founded.[4]
Arts and culture
[edit]Books
[edit]Films
[edit]- A Voz do Carnaval
- Ganga Bruta
- Honra e Ciúmes
- Onde a Terra Acaba
Births
[edit]- 7 January - Nicette Bruno, actress (died 2020)
- 9 January – Paulo Goulart, actor (died 2014)
- 27 January – Ary Fontoura, actor, writer, director, poet and TV-presenter[6]
- 14 March – Manoel Carlos, novelist
- 8 July – Paulo Tarso Flecha de Lima, diplomat (died 2021)
- 28 October – Garrincha, footballer (died 1983)[7]
- 5 November – Paulo César Saraceni, film director and screenwriter (died 2012)[8]
- 14 December – Eva Wilma, actress (died 2021)
Deaths
[edit]- 25 March – João de Deus Mena Barreto, a member of the junta that temporarily governed Brazil when Washington Luís was deposed.
- 19 April – Vital Soares, lawyer and politician (born 1874)
- 2 May – Juliano Moreira, psychiatrist (born 1872)[9]
- 23 October – Jerônimo de Sousa Monteiro, politician (born 1870)[10]
References
[edit]- ^ "História do Departamento de Medicina". Campus São Paulo - UNIFESP (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 12 February 2022.
- ^ Pereira, Aldo (1987). Breve História da Aviação Comercial Brasileira (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Europa. p. 278.
- ^ League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. 163, pp. 394–413.
- ^ "A nova capital de Goyaz" (página 9 do caderno único), Folha da Noite (24 de outubro de 1933).
- ^ Diffie, Bailey W.; Freyre, Gilberto; Putnam, Samuel (November 1946). "The Masters and the Slaves [Casa-Grande & Senzala]: A Study in the Development of Brazilian Civilization". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 26 (4): 497. doi:10.2307/2507653.
- ^ Fontoura, Ary Entre Rios e Janeiros, Coleção Aplauso (Imprensa Oficial, 2006, ISBN 85-7060-448-3) p. 240
- ^ Jonathan Stevenson (20 January 2008). "Remembering the genius of Garrincha". BBC Sport. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
- ^ "Morre no Rio, aos 79 anos, o cineasta Paulo Cezar Saraceni". globo. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
- ^ Brazil, T.K. (org.), Santana-Junior, E. F., Casais-e-Silva, L. L. Projeto Herois da Saúde na Bahia. Juliano Moreira 1872- 1933 Archived 20 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Jerônimo de Souza Monteiro" (in Portuguese). Federal Senate. Archived from the original on 29 November 2012. Retrieved 19 June 2014.
See also
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1933 in Brazil.