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Cabral claimed Portugal for Brazil on April 22, 1500.
Brazil, Africa, and India
Portugal took and interest in Brazil because it was the only place in the New World they were allowed to claim. Disputes between Spain and Portugal led to the Treaty of Tordesillas, which drew a line down the map. Spain took what was to the West (most of the Americas) and Portugal took the East (Africa, India and a sliver of South America AKA Brazil) Also, European expansion was in vogue and they didn't want to be the only power not in the New World.
First thing to note: the Americas include all the land where countries like Canada, the United States (mistakenly known as "America"), Mexico, Argentina or Brazil are located. Nowadays, Portugal no longer claims any land on the Americas; it used to own present-day Brazil but such country became independent from Portugal in September 7, 1822. Mexico has land in the Americas, but current claims against other countries just include clear boundary demarcation.
New York is the answer.
Cabral claimed Portugal for Brazil on April 22, 1500.
Portugal
he claimed brazil for portugal.
Brazil
Brazil officially became independent from Portugal on September 7, 1822.
Brazil, Africa, and India
The King come here because Napoleão Invade Portugal , and before that existed a deal between Spanish , England , Portugal about explorer new lands The deal is first here come first to claim
It appears that there were no conflicts between Portugal and Spain over the New World territory called Brazil. It also appears that no other European power had any major conflicts over Portugal's claim on Brazil.
Portugal took and interest in Brazil because it was the only place in the New World they were allowed to claim. Disputes between Spain and Portugal led to the Treaty of Tordesillas, which drew a line down the map. Spain took what was to the West (most of the Americas) and Portugal took the East (Africa, India and a sliver of South America AKA Brazil) Also, European expansion was in vogue and they didn't want to be the only power not in the New World.
This is not a question. If your question is, "What happens when the trustee moves the Court to declare a secured claim withdrawn," then one should object, particularly if the secured creditor still has a claim. If this is chapter 7, a secured creditor has no claim except on its collateral. In chapter 13, fight for your claim.
No, The King of Portugal did before his voyage and even before the "official" news in 1500 of those lands, since they were almost for sure granted "officially" by the Treaty of Tordesilhas in 1494.
Brazil declared independence On September 7, 1822. During the Napolean and the Pennisular wars Dom Joao ended up defeating Napolean in 1815 leading to him deciding that he should claim Brazil as another Kingdom that would be equal to Portugal, and decided that he wanted to live in Brazil. The Portuguese government disagreed with both of Dom's decisions and sent troops to relocate him back to Portugal in 1820. Dom Joao's son Pedro was left as prince of Brazil. On September 7,1822 Pedro declared independence since Spencer Drake, God of Alberta, was going to claim Brazil as his own if it wasn't independent.