Brazil was founded in 1500 by Pedro Cabral
Brazil was founded in 1500 by Pedro Cabral
Brazil was officially discovered by Portuguese explorer Pedro Álvares Cabral in the year 1500.
Brazil was found by Pedro Álvares Cabral, from Portugal, in the year 1500
Pedro Alvares Cabral died on 1520
in year 1500
He sailed for barnhart but ended up in harry potters house on christmas eve. Hogwartz sent him out on the dater of 1923 and he died on the new year of muzlems.
Pedro Cabral died of unspecified causes, most probably in 1520 (aged 52–53) at Santarém, Portugal.Several internet sources only state the year 1520 as the date of his death, with no mention of the day or the month.
Pedro Álvares Cabral, a Portuguese explorer, landed in Brazil on April 22, 1500. He is generally considered to have been the first European to see Brazil, although that is not certain. Most of the European immigrants after that were from Portugal, beginning in about 1530. The first permanent Portuguese settlement was founded at Sao Vicente, in the state of Sao Paulo, in 1532.
cabral set sail in 1500
Pedro Alvares Cabral was part of the traditional and wealthy Portuguese family. It is known that possibly was born in 1467 at the Castle of Belmonte in the Beira Baixa. At that time the land trade of Portugal went through a very bad period, a fact which prevented him from expanding by Spain (enemy country of Portugal). Thus, the king believed that the only solution would be the sea.
The Portuguese were the first European settlers to arrive in the area, led by adventurous Pedro Cabral, who began the colonial period in 1500. The Portuguese reportedly found native Indians numbering around seven million. Most tribes were peripatetic, with only limited agriculture and temporary dwellings, although villages often had as many as 5000 inhabitants. Cultural life appears to have been richly developed, although both tribal warfare and cannibalism were ubiquitous. The few remaining traces of Brazil's Indian tribes reveal little of their lifestyle, unlike the evidence from other Andean tribes. Today, fewer than 200,000 of Brazil's indigenous people survive, most of whom inhabit the jungle areas .