There's
always a story behind a name. And Rio has a funny one... In the year of
1502 Portuguese explorers sailed over to Brazil. Their mission:
confirming the existence of the land Pedro Alvares Cabral claimed he'd
discovered (reportedly by accident, as he'd been sent on an expedition
to India, and got lost along the way, but that's another
story).
This second journey was headed by André Gonçalves. He was the one
who found the bay today known as Guanabara. Apparently he mistook it for
the mouth of a river, rio, in Portuguese, the month was January (Janeiro),
and the name stuck. By then Rio was inhabited by
Indians, who soon
started to trade with the Portuguese. In addition to exotic birds like
parrots and toucans, the funny-dressed visitors were also quite
interested in pau-brasil. This native wood with a deep red color was
used to dye fabrics in the XVI century.
Of course the relationship with the natives was not all roses. While Indians were no match to the modern weapons used by the
Portuguese, some tribes had anthropophagic rituals that virtually
terrified the Europeans. Up North, in the Amazon, they even had a
technique to shrink skulls to the size of a tennis ball! The Indians also traded with the French and the Dutch, Portugal was not the only
country with an interest in the new land.
Some
historians claim that the first edification in Rio was built in an area
known today as the Flamengo.
It was a masonry house that Natives used to call Carioca (see people).
Nothing much came out of it, though, and the Portuguese did not give
much importance to their finding for a while. Until the French decided
to set foot here, that is. In 1555 Admiral Villegaignon landed in Rio to
found in Brazil the Antartic France, a colony of French Calvinists.
The Portuguese were not very happy with the idea, and thus sent Mem
de Sá, who managed to expel the French in a mere two days, according to
records. He left Rio and sailed back home, quite sure he had taught
everybody a lesson. He should have known better, though as the French
soon came back for more. In 1564, Estacio de Sá (a nephew) saw this
second group of squatters with his very own eyes! This time it
took them a full two years to finally get the area back to the hands of
the Portuguese.
Estácio de Sá is the official founder of the city. He was later
killed by a Brazilian Indian, pierced by an arrow. Morro do Castelo,
around Guanabara Bay, is
where the city was born. This hill was later put down, the only sign
that it was once there is Ladeira da Misericordia (an uphill street that
now leads to nowhere). The then clear waters of Guanabara
Bay were used for fishing and whaling.
The first economic
activities in Rio sugarcane farming. Brazilian Indians and African
slaves did the heavy work. In addition to sugar, cachaça from Rio
became world-famous. It was even used as a trading coin in exchange for
slaves, who came from Portuguese feitorias (strongholds) spread
along the coast of Africa. In the XVII century a number of religious
orders sprouted in the city, and many churches date back to this period.
Rio only started to grow faster in 1690, with the discovery of gold
in neighboring state of Minas Gerais. Minas is not bathed by the sea,
and Rio was the closest port. The city suddenly started to attract
uncalled-for attention. The French attacked Rio in 1710, and were
repelled. They came again 1711, this time with a large fleet led by
Duguay-Trouin. This time they were successful. When reinforcements
arrived from Minas, they had to negotiate with the pirates and pay a
ransom.
As
the city started to grow and become more metropolitan, a more regular
supply of fresh water became essential. This is when the Carioca
Acqueduct was planned. The most visible part of it, known today as Arcos
da Lapa, was inaugurated in 1723. Stone, brick, sand, lime, whale oil
and two years of slave labour produced a structure so solid that until
today it is used as an overpass by the Santa Teresa tram line.
During this period the Portuguese Crown had misunderstandings with
religious orders in Brazil. These orders had properties, sugarcane
plantations and mills, slaves, and some were quite powerful. Jesuits
were persecuted and expelled, and their property confiscated - including
Morro do Castelo, the oldest settlement in Rio. The Carmelites also lost
their convent at Largo do Carmo.
Rio became the capital
of the Vice-Kingdom of Brazil in 1763. By then Rio was already a city
with 50 thousand residents. The location was more strategic than
Salvador, the previous capital. Brazil was then having problems to
control a province known as the Cisplatina, who would eventually seceed
and become the country of Uruguay.
In 1770 the first coffee plantations appeared, and soon spread along
the valley of the Paraiba River. The revolution in France had reflects
in Brazil. Portugal tried to exert a tighter control on the colony and
raised the taxes. The first movements for independence were reported,
and in 1792 Rio witnessed the hanging of Tiradentes. The Brazilian
Martyr of Independence was later decapitated, the head was taken back to
his native Vila Rica and exposed in a public square.
Tiradentes' execution was signed by Dona Maria I, Queen of Portugal,
but she probably never even realized was happened. Dona Maria I, was
married her uncle, Dom João III. He died in 1786, and she became the
Queen of Portugal. Two years later her eldest son, Dom José, died of
smallpox. She started to show signs of madness, in 1792, and Dom João
had to take over the family job.
It seems Dom João was
not really that keen on becoming the king. He only agreed to becoming
the Prince Regent in 1799, when D. Maria was declared incurable. Though
many historians seem to be more interested in gruesome appearence,
reportedly poor personal hygiene standards, and instatiable appetite,
his role in the urban development of Rio cannot be ignored.
Dom João VI was married to Dona Carlota Joaquina, a dish for anyone
interested in ugly royals. They married when she was only ten years old,
and on one of their first meetings she almost bit off his ear and threw
a crystal glass at his face. They only knew each other in the biblical
sense five years later, when she was already fifteen.
In the early
nineteenth century, Europe was being ravaged by Napoleon. Dom João VI,
the Portuguese monarch, packed up and fled with his wife and the whole
court to Rio. This increased the city population from 50 to 65 thousand
in one year, and 70 thousand on the next.
Although the Portuguese royalty was not exactly a model of
sophistication, they did bring with them civilized habits, like
using silverware. Locals did their best to please the sovereign, and
taking advantage of this, D João VI often paid his debts by giving
nobility titles or awards.
Many important landmarks were inaugurated by D. João VI including
the Botanical Gardens, Royal Library, São João Theater, Royal School
of Sciences, Arts and Crafts, etc. The Botanical Gardens were created to
adapt plants to Rio's tropical climate. He
also brought important European artists who portrayed in detail the
colonial years. Jean Baptiste Debret is maybe the most famous of them
all. Dom João never really took to life in the tropics, though, and as
soon as things quieted down he moved back to Portugal.
He
left his son Pedro in charge of things. This same Pedro would later
declare the country independent. Dom Pedro was the first Emperor of
Brazil, and quite a womanizer. His extra-marital affairs were common
knowledge (Marquesa de Santos, became almost as famous as his
wife, Austrian-born Empress Leopoldina).
Soon he resigned in favor of his son and namesake Pedro, who
then was only 5 years old! The country would only enjoy some political
stability after D. Pedro II gained majority, 9 years later. In the mid
1800's the city received major improvements with access to gas lights,
plumbing, a sewage system, telephone and telegraph. A railway linking
the city to the State of Minas Gerais was built (Central do Brasil).
In the year of 1888 the African slaves were freed by Princess Isabel,
and a large migration from the country fields to the city took place.
Rio's first favela (shanty town) was born on the Providencia
Hill. The dwellers were Black military who had fought in Bahia, and did
not get support when they returned home. Favela is the name of a plant
found in that region of Bahia.
With
a military coupe in 1889 the first Republic was born, under the rule of
Marshal Deodoro da Fonseca, our first president. Rio was the capital of
Brazil until the year of 1960, when President Juscelino Kubitschek
inaugurated what was his dream vision of a model capital. The federal
district was then transferred to Brasilia, a city oddly shaped like an
airplane. Rio remained the cultural capital of the country, and the
favorite city in Brazil. It is the capital of the State of Rio de
Janeiro.
Brazil is at present going through an integration process with its
neighboring countries, namely: Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay.
Together they make the Mercosur (Mercosul in Portuguese). Import
barriers are gradually being reduced, in the likes of the NAFTA, and the
European Community. Rio is the ideal city for companies interested in
establishing a foothold in this new and attractive marketplace.