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A854.03
Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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, the Licentiate Francisco Leme do Prado, and Dionizio Bicudo: Joam dos Santos, another of the party, was a native of Rio de Janeiro; .. their slaves and Indians made up the number of fifty. Manoel Felix was at the sole expence of the 5 outfit, the others indeed had nothing but their persons and their slaves to embark; some were mere vagabonds, without character or means; the others, young raw men, unprincipled, and deeply in debt, some of whom had already fled from Cuyaba to Mato Grosso to avoid
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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expelled ib. Jesuits deported from Maranham 537 Transactions at Curupa 538 Ruy Vaz de Sequeira, Governor 540 His temporizing policy 541 Proceedings at Belem 542 Mello seeks to counteract the measures of his successor 543 Sequeira effects the restoration of the Jesuits 546 CHAPTER XXVIII. Barreto Governor General 549 Rio de Janeiro separated from the general government 551 Insurrection there against Salvador Correa ib. He conciliates the Paulistas and restores order 553 Carmelites established at
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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honourably in this expedition, that he was rewarded with a pension, and the Order of Christ. The Portugueze were not strong enough to keep the island which they had taken; they demolished all the works of the French, carried off all their artillery and stores, and sailed to the port of Santos, where every thing needful for the sick and wounded, and provisions for all, had been provided by the indefatigable exertions of Nobrega. July 17, 1560. Annoes do Rio Janeiro. MSS. c. 7. Villegagnon was at this
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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they should do so, in the present instance, ought to be regarded favourably by the Tamoyos, as proof of their fidelity; for were it otherwise, reasonably might they conclude that men who broke their faith with their friends, would not keep it with their enemies. Aimbere's answer was, that if the Portugueze would not give up these men who had slain and devoured so many of his friends, there should be no peace; and as he spoke for a large part of the hordes of Rio de Janeiro, the conference seemed to
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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suddenly, disgusted and alarmed; they had been told by a slave that there was a design of murdering them, and upon this fear they fled, fully believing the false intelligence; in which belief they were confirmed because one of Aimbere's companions, they said, had been slain by a certain Domingos de Braga13. The men of Rio de Janeiro hearing this, concluded that the treaty was broken, as they wished, and returned to their own villages. They would have taken Anchieta with them, if he had not been
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. IX. 1567. burning and massacring Hugonots to think of Brazil; and Coligny, after his generous plans had been ruined by the villainous treachery of Villegagnon, regarded the Colony no longer: the day for emigration from his country was over, and they who should have colonized Rio de Janeiro were bearing arms against a bloody and implacable enemy, in defence of every thing dear to man. Portugal was almost as inattentive as France. The death of Joam was to Brazil an irreparable loss; for
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A854.01
Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. X. 1582. The sugarcane indigenous. indigenous in Brazil, and grew plentifully about Rio de Janeiro. The French, who were ignorant of its culture, and knew not how to extract sugar, made a pleasant beverage, by steeping the cane in water; and they were greatly astonished to find, that if this infusion was kept long enough, it served them for vinegar also. De Lery. c. 13. Naufr.da N.S. Paul. Hist. Trag. Mar. 1. p. 373. Piso. l. 4. c. 20. Leafless parasite. Stedman. 1. 175. 1. 242. Piso. 4
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. XIV. 1624. Espirito Santo attacked. Jornada da Bahia c. 21. not more fortunate in an attempt which on his return to Bahia he made upon Espirito Santo, instigated by a Fleming, who having formerly resided there and received sentence of death for some criminal offence, had been pardoned, returned into his country, and entered the Dutch service. Salvador de Sa, son to the Governor of Rio de Janeiro, happened to be in that town on his way with succours to the Reconcave, and Heyne having lost
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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individuals of the nation were prepared for every sacrifice and every endurance, and that their efforts more than counterbalanced the remissness of their government. When application was made from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro for succours, the Provincial of the Jesuits wrote to the College in that city, and that indefatigable order sent a ship with supplies. Aid also was now confidently expected from Portugal, for after this attack upon the Reconcave both parties naturally supposed that all farther temporizing
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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. Thus by the cruising system the Dutch were enabled to carry on the war, and the prizes which were gained in this sort of lottery made it popular. Expedition for the recovery of Angola. Meantime they experienced both loss and disgrace in a quarter where they had little reason to apprehend either. Salvador Correa de Sa, a fidalgo of that family by whom the French had been expelled from Rio de Janeiro, and the city founded, projected an expedition for the recovery of Angola, and obtained the secret
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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were addressed to the Bishop of Bahia, notwithstanding his distance from the scene. He was charged immediately to recall this man, and proceed against him as his offences deserved: in case these orders should be neglected, then, and not till then, the Governor of the Mines was authorized and enjoined to seize the criminal. Regulation respecting arms. Carta Regia, 24 July, 1711. MS. Ordem. 28 March, MS. When S. Paulo and the Mines were separated from the Captaincy of Rio de Janeiro, it was left to
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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power, 514; Mutiny of troops on the Rio Negro, 516; regulations concerning the Indians, promulgated at Para, 522; charges against the Jesuits presented to the Pope, 536; attempt to assassinate the King, 540; the Jesuits condemned as accomplices, and deported from Para and Maranham, 541; conduct of the Archbishop of Bahia, 543; different conduct of the Bishop of Rio de Janeiro, 545; Companies of Maranham and Pernambuco established, 548; the British factories affected by these monopolies, 551
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. VII. 1552. Stade. p. 4. c. 41. termined to fly. Before the time of their departure was come, a boat arrived from a French ship which was lying at Rio de Janeiro; it came to trade for pepper, monkeys, and parrots. One man who spake the language of the Tupinambas landed, and Hans intreated him to take him on board; but his masters would not permit him to go, for they were resolved to have a good ransom for him. He begged them then to go with him to the ship; this also they refused
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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done but half his work at Rio Janeiro. The French whom he had driven from Villegagnon's island had escaped to the main land, and the Tamoyos, assisted by them, and in some degree disciplined by them, were now inflicting cruel retaliation upon the Portugueze for the wrongs which they had endured at their hands. They were a branch of the great Tupi stock, but claimed affinity with none except the Tupinambas, and were enemies to all other tribes, .. especially to the Goayzacares and Goaynazes, with
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. IX. 1568. S. Vasc. C.C. 3. 129 136. when the tide returned, the French made off, having sustained considerable loss. This was the last alarm which they gave to Rio de Janeiro. When the reinforcements arrived from St. Vicente, Salvador pursued them to Cape Frio; they were gone, but another ship of two hundred tons had arrived there, well manned, and mounting so many guns, that the crew thought themselves in no danger from a flotilla of canoes. They made a brave defence. Salvador himself
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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Diego Mendieta, his nephew, whom he appointed Governor as long as his daughter should remain unmarried, made even Zarate regretted. The insolence and cruelty of this young successor soon became insupportable. He was seized at Santa Fe and embarked on board a caravel to be sent prisoner to Spain. The Pilot was his partizan, and made for Rio de Janeiro; there he found friends, and was encouraged to return in the same vessel and recover his authority. But this man's vices were proof against adversity
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. XIII. 1614. Berredo. 248 252. prisoner. Belchior Rangel had the command of this party, a native of Rio de Janeiro, who was a young man of great promise, and excellently versed in many of the Brazilian languages. On the following morning the Commander began to look out a place for his encampment, taking Diogo with him; but Diogo's patience was well nigh exhausted, when four days were wasted in these unavailing and frivolous delays, and not a spade set to the trenches. His exclamations
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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Lagoas. B. Freire. 657. Do. 648. 669. Cast. Lus. 3. 104. Mathias razed the fortifications of Porto Calvo, and buried in the woods the guns which he had taken there. He then effected his march to the Lagoas, and there the emigrants dispersed, each going whither he thought best, some to Rio de Janeiro, the greater number to Bahia. The wreck of the Portugueze force now collected at the Lagoas, consisted of four hundred soldiers, besides Indians; it was determined to fortify the Southern settlement
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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CHAP. XXII. 1648. gueze. The payment of debts was impossible: these debts were perhaps the cause of the revolt; if the Pernambucans could not pay them then, much less could they now; and according to this treaty, they could neither live in Pernambuco nor out of it, if they might be followed with law-suits every where. Whither, too, were they to go? Having no capital, wherever they went they would require support, which neither Bahia, nor Rio de Janeiro, nor the other parts of Brazil could
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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our men? upon every alarm in Alentejo it is necessary to take students from the university, tradesmen from their shops, labourers from the plough! Where is our money? the expences and losses which already have been incurred amount to five millions! Sixty ships have been captured during the present year. The last armament might have undeceived us; to raise seamen we were obliged to wait for the Rio de Janeiro fleet; to raise troops we took them from the frontiers; to provide artillery we stript
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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Pernambuco, and spread along the coast to Rio de Janeiro. The mortality was dreadful; families of forty or fifty persons sickened at once, so that there was not in the whole establishment one who had strength enough to assist the rest, go for medical assistance, or seek such remedies as were at hand. The medical practitioners were not numerous enough to attend the multitudes who now required their aid, .. and indeed they had little aid to give; the disease till now had scarcely been known in
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro, and Maranham, were made Bishopricks. In the ensuing year, four Franciscan nuns from the convent of S. Clara at Evora arrived to establish their order in the capital of Portugueze America. Noble families who could not portion their daughters suitably to their rank, wanted a nunnery in which they might dispose of them by shutting them up; .. such institutions are always acceptable to a bigotted people, and thus pride and superstition united in soliciting this
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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CHAP. XXVIII. 1679. The Guaranies capture the crew of a shipwrecked vessel. Charlevoix, 2, p. 185 7. been intended. The third made for the sea shore, and having reached it coasted along southward; near Cape S. Maria they fell in with a party of shipwrecked Portugueze belonging to a vessel which had been sent before the Rio de Janeiro fleet, and the Captain with eighty men was proceeding along the shore toward his place11 of destination. The Guaranies, who considered all Portugueze as their
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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which a corrupt Church has substituted for faith in Christ, and for the duties of genuine Christianity. Nor must this be considered as a mere case of individual madness; while Almeida lived he was an object of reverence and admiration, not only to the common people in Rio de Janeiro, but to persons of all ranks; his excesses were in the spirit of his religion, and they were recorded after his death for edification and example, under the sanction of the Superiors of an Order which at that time held
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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CHAP. XXXVI. vernor and Captain General of the Captaincy of Rio de Janeiro, Friend, I the King, greet you. The good reputation which you have obtained in your government causes me particular satisfaction, since it confirms the judgement with which you were chosen for it. And although on this account it may seem superfluous in any manner to remind you of your duties, nevertheless, I esteem it a fitting and peculiar mark of my good will towards you, and of my expectation that you will in all
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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, his fidelity to the Portugueze, i. 494. James I. of England, his grant of territory in South America to Robert Harcourt, iii. 12. Jandicis, tribe of, harrass the Portugueze, i. 495. Janeiro, Rio de, expedition of Villegagnon to, i. 271; the French works demolished by the Portugueze, 280; the seat of the new Government on the division of Brazil, 311; again made subordinate to Bahia, 315. (See Rio de Janeiro.) Jangada, or raft used in Brazil, i. 413. Japan, Bishop of, his death, ii. 232. Japi, Wasu
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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by the Spaniards, who call it Asumpcion, 66. Lancaster, James, his expedition to Brazil, i. 364; arrival at Recife, 365; wins the town, 366; engages the Dutch in his service, 367; joined by a squadron of French privateers, ib.; attempts of the Portugueze to burn his ships, 369; sails home with his booty, 371. Lancastro, Francisco Naper de, sent to reoccupy Nova Colonia, ii. 580. Lancastro, Fernando Mascarenhas de, Governor of Rio de Janeiro, sends a commission to the Minas Geraes, iii. 75; goes
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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from Maranham created an alarm among the inhabitants, iii. 552, note; increase of its culture in Brazil, from the enormous demand in Great Britain, 768. Couroq, oil of, its uses in Brazil, i. 327. Courserac, second in command to Du Guay Trouin against Rio de Janeiro, iii. 110; lost on his return home, 123. Coutinho, Francisco Pereira de, his settlement in Bahia, i. 41; expelled by the Tupinambas, 43. Couto, Jos Vieira, recommends that the camel should be introduced in Brazil, iii. 832. Covas
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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Sa, Salvador Correa de, appointed Chief Captain on the death of Eustacio, i. 301. Sa, Francisco Nunez Marinhode, appointed to command against the Dutch, i. 447. Sa, Mem de, Governor of Brazil, i. 268; outcry against his attempts on behalf of the natives, ib.; his measures against the refractory natives, 269; his expedition against the French, 279; against the Aymores, 283; after the defeat of the French at Rio de Janeiro, founds St. Sebastian's, 302; puts a Protestant to death, 303; dies, 310
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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curious or more enlightened individual, and afterwards extirpated for the reason which Vieyra assigns. A few cinnamon plants, Dr. Arruda adds, were preserved, notwithstanding the law, in Pernambuco, and cultivated in secret till this time. (Discurso sobre utilidade da Instituicam de Jardins nas principaes Provincias do Brazil. Rio Janeiro, 1810, p. 8) The edict, however, though very much in the spirit of the Philips, belongs either to Cardinal Henrique's reign, or to the latter years of Sebastian's
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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there should be silver pieces of 5 outavas, to pass for 600 reis, of 2 , to pass for 300, of 2, 1, and , at the proportionate rates of 240, 120, and 60. He advised also, that 40,000 cruzados should be issued in small money, of half testoens, 2 vintens and one vintem, in the proportion of 15,000 for Bahia, 9000 For Pernambuco, and 6000 for Rio de Janeiro: the remaining 10,000 to be in copper coin; 5000 for Bahia, 3000 for Pernambuco, and 2000 for the Rio. The want of small money, he said, was
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Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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successors, 60. Natal, city of, in Rio Grande do Norte, iii. 765. Natural History, Academy of, instituted at Rio de Janeiro, iii. 643. Nazareth, Pontal de, north of Recife, its importance, i. 483; attacked by the Dutch, 499; they pass the bar and win the town, ib.; Fernandes sends troops against it, ii. 123; Hoogstraten delivers it up, 131; the port secured by the Portugueze, 165. Neenghaibas, tribe of, attempts of the Portugueze to reduce, ii. 519; Vieyra proposes to treat with them, 521
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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am, 575. St. Salvador, in Bahia, founded, i. 213, 215; state of, in 1581, 317; taken by the Dutch, 441; they strengthen the city, 442; make a successfnl sally, 449; they capitulate, 450; the city besieged by Nassau, 551; the siege raised, 559. (See Bahia.) S. Salvador, town of, on the river Paraiba do Sul, iii. 818. S. Sebastian, founded, i. 302; (See Rio de Janeiro.) S. Sebastians, isle of, near the Bay of Santos, iii. 851; description of an idol in, from Roggewein's Voyage, 898. S. Teresa, the
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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maitre ne desiroit autre avantage que ce que les Anglois et les Hollandois jouissoient; c'est a dire, d'avoir quatre familles dans les ports de Bahia, du Rio de Janeiro, et de Pernambuco; et que si le Roy de la Grande Bretagne, et les Hollandois vouloient convenir de rapeller les dites familles, le Roy son maitre feroit revenir le Consul, et Marchands Fran ois, qui y avoient t envoy s par la derniere flotte, et que pour l'avenir aucune nation y trafiqueroit, si non pour les Marchand Portugais
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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Bardza, F. Cypriano, his labours among the Moxos, iii. 198; forms the first Reduction, 199; explores a way across the mountains to Peru, 205; he goes among the Baures, 206; his martyrdom, 208. Barbalho, lands with a force north of the Potengi, i. 572; retreats and returns to Bahia, 573. Barbalho Bezerra, Agostinho, compelled to accept the appointment of Governor by the insurgents of the Rio de Janeiro, ii. 552; his search for the mines discovered by Azevedo, iii. 46. Barbote, or mouth-piece of
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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CHAP. X. 1572. Final defeat of the Tamoyos. Noticias. MSS. 1. 55. Cape Frio, and the Tamoyos were faithful to their alliance with them. Salema determined to rid his district of these enemies. He collected a force of four hundred Portugueze, and seven hundred Indians, and with Christovam de Barros, who had signalized himself in the expulsion of the French from Rio de Janeiro, attacked the Tamoyos and their European allies. Their villages were strongly palisadoed; they made a brave resistance
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 1.
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mais livre de incendios. 122. Banished from Pernambuco, p. 394.] Men were too valuable in Brazil to be transported out of it, .. besides, it appears that they were transported from one port to another. In the Noticias, p. 2. c. 67. a story is told of two Tupinambas, who were degredaded from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro, and found their way buck through the woods. 123. Taking with him six Tupinambas, p. 400.] These Tupinambas put into Falmouth on their way, and remained there six weeks. And there
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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, i. 270; enters Rio de Janeiro, 271; conspiracy against him, 276; his conduct towards the savages, 275; his treachery, 277; returns to France, 280. Vine, introduced into Brazil, but destroyed by the ants, i. 329. Violete, pao de, or violet-wood, produced in Ibiapaba, ii. 512. Virgin, extract from Anchieta's poem to the, i. 293; said to have fought at the head of the Portugueze against the French, 655; said to have assisted in the victory of Monte das Tabocas, ii. 116; a mutilated image of
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loyalists roused by his designs, 98; a counter-revolution in, 99; increase of its population, 769; destitute of inns and lodging-houses 772. Recolhimento, founded at Bahia, iii. 151; such an institution desirable in England, ib. Reconcave, of Bahia, revolutions in the, i. 42; ravages of the small pox in, 294; force of, in 1581, 317; sugar works in, 318; laid waste by the Dutch, i. 574; ravaged by Schoppe, ii. 206. Reconcave, of the Rio de Janeiro, its advantages for commerce, iii. 817. Rede, or
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
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; and the admiration of the Brazilians for F. Joam d'Almeida was so great, especially in Rio de Janeiro, that they used his relics in diseases, with as much faith as if he had been canonized, and with as much success; and for a while they invoked no other Saint, as if they had forgotten their former objects of devotion! Corruption of Christionity. Such were the40 extravagancies to which the Catholic superstition was carried in Brazil. For the self-government which divine philosophy requires, it
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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, 323; are defeated by the Governor of Paraguay, ib.; on the Braganzan revolution, wish to elect a king for themselves, 327; defeated by the Indians of the Reductions, 330, favour the insurrection at Rio de Janeiro, 552; Salvador Correa conciliates them, 553; called in against the Guerens, 564; discovery and conquest of Piauhy, 568; tribes on the Tocantins apply for protection against them, 597; expedition to that river in search of mines, 598; their adventurous spirit, 668; a party of them reach
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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; consequences, 151. Desterro, Antonio de, Bishop of Rio de Janeiro, his conduct on the expulsion of the Jesuits, iii. 545. Devil, in New Spain, Herrera's description of, i, 639. Devil worship, among the Manacicas, described by the Jesuits, iii. 182. Dews, of Brazil, why unwholesome according to Cardenas, i. 647. Diamantes, districto defezo dos, mountains of, the source of the Paraguay, i. 131. Diamond contract, iii. 624. Diamonds, discovered in Serro do Frio, iii. 274; consequences of this discovery
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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the Missionaries in Maranham, i. 458. Lisbon, British factory at, affected by the monopolies of the Brazil Companies, iii. 550. Llanas, Ramon de las, a partizan of Antequera in his usurpation, iii. 212; arrested, 233. Llorente, Antonio, his history of the Spanish Inquisition to be expected, ii. 699. Loanda, the capital of Angola, taken by the Dutch, ii. 9; effects of the capture upon Brazil, 10. Lobato, F. Joam, how regarded by the Portugueze, ii. 689, note. Lobo, Manoel, Governor of Rio de
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Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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employed in embassies, seems to have frequented the society of Portugueze Jews, whom many of his countrymen would have shunned with abhorrence, or in apprehension of the consequences to themselves when they returned within the sphere of their then terrible Inquisition. D. Luiz enquired of a Jew, who was born at Rio de Janeiro, and whom he praises for his sound understanding, what could be the reason that the King of Spain derived so much larger a revenue from his mines than the King of Portugal
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A854.03
Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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; expedition of Estacio de Sa, 296; the French finally defeated at Rio de Janeiro, 301; S. Sebastians founded, 302; the French expelled from Paraiba, 305; Brazil divided into two governments, 311; their re-union, 315; sovereignty of, offered to the Duke of Braganza, ib.; state of in 1581, 316; sugar-works, 318; fruits, 319; plants, 320; fishery, 322; diseases prevalent in, 327; disputes on the frontiers, 331; the French driven from Paraiba, 351; intercourse of the English with, 352; their first act
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A854.02
Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 2.
Text
morning to find them out, and returning toward evening, ever endeavouring like a kite to snatch away our Caravel and Pattachio, which lay like chickens under our wings; till at last about the height of Bahia it left us, despairing to meet any of their fleet higher up. Thus prosperously they arrived at Rio de Janeiro, after a three months voyage, having lost only one man, of more than four hundred, in their four ships. Going on shore, he continues, I found a lodging prepared for me by the Fathers
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A854.03
Beagle Library:
Southey, Robert. 1810-19. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme. Volume 3.
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. Portugueze, their first settlement in Brazil, i. 20; Jesuit Mission appointed, 214; opposition of the settlers to the Missionaries, 257; defeat the French at Rio de Janeiro, 301; drive them from Paraiba, 351; defeat them in Maranham, 418; break their treaty with them, 424; obtain the unconditional surrender of S. Louis, 426; rally against their Dutch invaders, 442; their zeal for the deliverance of St. Salvador, 446; recover it, 450; disasters of their fleet on its return to Europe, 454
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A808
Beagle Library:
Mawe, John. 1812. Travels in the interior of Brazil, particularly in the gold and diamond districts of that country. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green.
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think of remaining in Rio de Janeiro, where I found myself daily getting worse; otherwise I have not the smallest doubt that the generosity of the Prince would have amply repaid me for the fatigues I had encountered. [page] 26
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A808
Beagle Library:
Mawe, John. 1812. Travels in the interior of Brazil, particularly in the gold and diamond districts of that country. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green.
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This was Sunday the 17th of September, being one month since my departure from Rio de Janeiro, during which time I had been almost continually on horseback; for the time I remained at Villa Rica was principally occupied in journeys to various places in the neighbourhood. [page] 21
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Beagle Library:
Mawe, John. 1812. Travels in the interior of Brazil, particularly in the gold and diamond districts of that country. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown & Green.
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CHAPTER IV. Voyage to St. Catherine's. Description of that Island, and of the Coast in its Vicinity. Arrival at Santos, and Journey thence to S. Paulo 55 CHAPTER V. Description of S. Paulo. System of Farming prevalent in its Neighbourhood Excursion to the Gold Mines of Jaragu . Mode of working them. Return to Santos 92 CHAPTER VI. Coasting Voyage from Santos to Sapitiva, and Journey thence to Rio de Janeiro 122 CHAPTER VII. Description of Rio de Janeiro. Trade. State of Society. Visit to the
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