Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PART ONE POPULATION
- PART TWO ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: SPANISH AMERICA
- PART THREE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: BRAZIL
- 12 Colonial Brazil, c. 1580–c. 1750: plantations and peripheries
- 13 Indians and the frontier in colonial Brazil
- 14 Colonial Brazil: the gold cycle, c. 1690–1750
- 15 Late colonial Brazil, 1750–1808
- PART FOUR INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL LIFE
- Bibliographical essays
14 - Colonial Brazil: the gold cycle, c. 1690–1750
from PART THREE - ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: BRAZIL
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- PART ONE POPULATION
- PART TWO ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: SPANISH AMERICA
- PART THREE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL STRUCTURES: BRAZIL
- 12 Colonial Brazil, c. 1580–c. 1750: plantations and peripheries
- 13 Indians and the frontier in colonial Brazil
- 14 Colonial Brazil: the gold cycle, c. 1690–1750
- 15 Late colonial Brazil, 1750–1808
- PART FOUR INTELLECTUAL AND CULTURAL LIFE
- Bibliographical essays
Summary
DISCOVERY
For almost three centuries following the discovery of Brazil in 1500 the Portuguese court was flooded with reports of fabulous gold strikes in Brazil. These had often lacked foundation and had been a blend of misguided trust placed in native American legends, over-optimistic accounts by explorers, and the apparently undeniable logic that a continent which had rewarded the Spaniards with gold, emeralds, and silver must also possess precious metals in that part allocated to the Portuguese by the Treaty of Tordesillas (1494).
Not all these reports had been totally devoid of truth. Gold had indeed been found in São Vicente in the 1560s, and by the 1570s Paulistas had discovered alluvial gold in Paranaguá. There had been reports of gold strikes in the interior of the captaincy of Bahia by João Coelho de Sousa; his brother Gabriel Soares de Sousa had received official authorization (1584) to launch an expedition to confirm these findings. In the seventeenth century as the bandeirantes penetrated deep into the interior of Brazil in their search for Indian slaves and precious metals, reports from Paranaguá, Curitiba, São Vicente, Espírito Santo, and Pernambuco convinced the crown of the potential mineral wealth of Portuguese America. But only at the end of the seventeenth and during the first half of the eighteenth centuries did Brazil yield up her riches.
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- The Cambridge History of Latin America , pp. 547 - 600Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984
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