IV. The Early Modern Period, 1500–1800 > H. Latin America, 1500–1800 > 9. Portuguese America, 1500–1815 > 1612
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  The Encyclopedia of World History.  2001.
 
 
1612
 
French colonists founded a town in the island of São Luis de Maranhão and sought alliance with Indian groups.  1
 
1615
 
Portuguese expelled French from Maranhão and founded Belém near the mouth of the Amazon River. The crown created the province of Maranhão, directly subordinated to the home government (1621). Maranhão was independent of Brazil until 1777.  2
 
1624–25
 
The Dutch captured Bahia but the Spanish fleet forced them to capitulate (1625).  3
 
1629
 
Slave-raiding parties (bandeirantes) penetrated the interior from São Paulo and attacked Spanish Jesuit missions on the upper Paraná (Guaira), forcing their transfer farther south and establishing Portuguese control of the region.  4
 
1630
 
A Dutch armada captured Recife and Olinda. The Dutch West India Company, a commercial corporation with investments in colonial commerce and slave trade and in privateering expeditions, named Prince Maurice of Nassau-Siegen governor. He extended Dutch control from the São Francisco River to Maranhão and established religious tolerance. Portuguese resisted in the countryside but Domingo Fernandes Calabar, a mulatto leader, gave support to the Dutch and they overcame Portuguese resistance. War between Portugal and Holland continued in Asia, where Portugal lost most of its colonies. Many slaves took advantage of the Dutch invasion to flee and form quilombos (fortified maroon villages) in remote areas beyond the reach of colonial authorities. Palmares, a territory between Alagoas and Pernambuco, was the most important quilombo, where a maroon society based on small tenancies and agriculture developed with a population of about 8,000, though some estimates go as high as 20,000.  5
 
1638
 
Departure of Prince Maurice ended policy of religious tolerance. Calvinist pastors preached against Catholics, causing widespread discontent among Portuguese.  6
 
1640
 
Conflicts between the Portuguese Jesuits and the bandeirantes erupted as the former attempted to protect the Indians from enslavement. Colonists expelled Jesuits from São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.  7
 
1654
 
The Portuguese forced the Dutch out of Brazil.  8
 
1667
 
Pernambuco authorities failed to subdue maroon area of Palmares.  9
 
1672
 
Expansion of cattle ranching in central Brazil. New expeditions of extermination against Gê and Tupi tribes depopulated Bahian countryside. Expeditions against the quilombo of Palmares intensified.  10
 
1680–83
 
Conflict between Spain and Portugal over control of the left bank of the Rio de la Plata (Banda Oriental). The Portuguese founded Colonia and the Spanish, Montevideo (1726). The territory changed hands frequently during the remainder of the colonial period.  11
In 1680 the crown issued a law to distribute lands to Indians, which colonists rejected (1684).  12
 
1683–1713
 
Guerra dos Bárbaros unleashed in Rio Grande do Norte and Ceará. Allied Gê and Tupi Indians rebelled against ruthless exploitation by colonists.  13
 
 
 
The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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