User:Caio79 (Brazil)

HeDing text
1889: The Viscount of Ouro Preto (Liberal)

1889-1890: Viscount of Maracaju (Independent)

1890-1891: Deodoro da Fonseca (Conservative)

1891-1893: Antônio da Silva Prado (Conservative)

1893-1895: -(Conservative)

1895-1898: Joaquim Nabuco (Liberal)

1898-1899: - (Conservative)

1899-1902: Rui Barbosa (Liberal)

(Failed coup/Chaos)

1902 - 1906: Military (1906)

(Failed coup/Chaos)

1906 - 1907: (1907)

1907 - 1909: Júlio Bueno Brandão (Liberal Conservative)

1909 - 1910: Rodrigues Alves (Liberal Conservative)

1910 - 1911: Júlio Bueno Brandão (Liberal Conservative)

1911 - 1915: Minas Gerais clique hardliner type (1912)

1915 - 1917: Epitácio Pessoa (Liberal Conservative)

(1917) 1917 - 1919: Artur Bernardes (Liberal Conservative)

1919 - 1921: Independent nobleman, dinstant relative to the imperial family (Made the Paulistas fall a bit)

(1921) 1921 - 1924: far-right clique, kinda outsider

(1924) 1924 - 1926: Radical/Independent, Diplomat and politician (incapable)

(1926) 1926 - 1929: Gaucho/Northern clique (Forced to resign, puppet of some guy)

1929 - 1930: Diplomat and ideologue (Interim) (São Paulo - far right clique compromise) (Some crisis idk)

(1930) 1930 - 1932: Washington Luís (Liberal Conservative)

1930 - 1940: Plínio Salgado (Integralist)

May 1940 - June 1941: Military

June 1941 - June 1942: Center Left

June 1942 - December 1942: Center Left

December 1942 - July 1943 : Center Right

July 1943 - March 1946: Osvaldo Aranha (1943, 1946) (Liberal Nationalist)

March 1946 - July 1949: Center Left

(1949) July 1949 - March 1951: Minority Center Left

March 1951 - November 1954: Center (1952)

November 1954 - May 1955: Caretaker

May 1955 - October 1956: Alberto Pasqualini (Labor)

October 1956 - March 1957: Center

March 1957 - May 1958: Center Left

May 1958 - November 1958: Center Left

November 1958 - August 1959: Caretaker

(1959) August 1959 - January 1960: Center Left

January 1960 - July 1962: Center

July 1962 - April 1963: Center minority

(1963) April 1963 - December 1964: Center

December 1964 - September 1965: Caretaker

September 1965 - December 1968: Afonso Arinos (June 1968) (Progressive)

December 1968 - February 1972: Juscelino Kubitschek (Progressive)

February 1972 - November 1974: Center Right (1972) (Brazilian Democratic)

November 1974 - August 1979: Leonel Brizola (July 1976) (Labor)

(1979) August 1979 - Octouber 1980: Ulysses Guimarães (Progressive)

October 1980 - December 1982: Itamar Franco (Labor)

December 1982 - August 1983: Magalhães Pinto (National Democratic)

(1983) August 1983 - April 1987: Center Left

April 1987 - July 1987: Center Right

(1987) July 1987 - April 1988: Center Left

April 1988 - July 1989: Center Left

July 1989 - June 1992: Center Left

(1992) April 1992 - April 1994: Fernando Collor

April 1994 - June 2000: Silvio Santos (1994, 1998)

June 2000 - April 2002: Enéas Carneiro

(2002, 2006) April 2002-2009: Lula

2009-2010: Gilberto Gil

2010-2011: Lula (2010)

2011-2014: Marta Suplicy

(2014) 2014-2018: Levy Fidelix

(2018) 2018-2022: Ciro Gomes

Geography
The territory of mainland Brazil is cut by two imaginary circles: the Equator, which passes through the mouth of the Amazon, and the Tropic of Capricorn, which cuts through the municipality of São Paulo. The country occupies a vast area along the eastern and southernmost coast of South America and includes much of the continent's interior, sharing land borders with Argentina and Paraguay to the southwest; Bolivia and Peru to the west; Colombia, Venezuela and the Guyanas to the nort. It also encompasses a series of oceanic archipelagos, such as Fernando de Noronha, Atol das Rocas, São Pedro and São Paulo, Paoland and Trindade and Martim Vaz. Its size, relief, climate and natural resources make Brazil a geographically diverse country.

The country is the second largest in the world in land area, after Russia, the largest in America, with a total area of number km². Its territory spans eight time zones, including all the overseas Provinces and Territories that make up the Empire.

The Brazilian topography is also diverse and includes hills, mountains, plains, plateaus, cerrados and deserts. Much of the terrain is located between two hundred and eight hundred meters in altitude. The main areas of highlands occupy more than the southern half of the country and the west. The northwest parts of the plateau are composed of terrain, broad broken underbelly, and rounded hills. The southeastern section is more robust, with a complex mass of mountain ranges and mountain ranges reaching altitudes of up to 1200 meters. These ranges include the Espinhaço, Mantiqueira and Mar ranges. In the north, the Guiana plateau forms a major drainage ditch, separating rivers flowing southward into the Amazon Basin from those flowing into Venezuela's Orinoco River system to the north.

Brazil has a dense and complex system of rivers, one of the most extensive in the world, with eight major river basins, which drain into the Atlantic. The most important rivers are the Amazon (the longest river in the world both in length – 6,937.08 kilometers in length – and in terms of water volume – flow of 12.5 billion liters per minute), Paraná and its largest affluent, the Iguaçu (which includes the Iguaçu Falls), the Negro, São Francisco, Xingu, Madeira and Tapajós.

Demographics
The population of Brazil, according to the census carried out by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) in 2019, was number inhabitants, with a proportion of men and women of nuber and number% of the population defined as urban. The population is heavily concentrated in the Southeast (number million inhabitants), Northeast (number million), North (number million), South (number million), Midwest (number million), overseas (number million).

Brazil is the fifth most populous nation in the world and is one of the only developed countries, along with the country, where there are prospects for an increase in a large part of the population. With a birth rate of number per thousand, number% below the world average, its population growth rate is number%, significantly higher than country and similar to that of country.

The largest urban agglomerations in Brazil are the metropolitan areas of São Paulo (number), Recife (number) and Rio de Janeiro (number). Almost all capitals are the largest cities in their provinces, with exceptions such as Vitoria, the capital of Espirito Santo and Desterro, the capital of Santa Catarina. There are also non-capital metropolitan regions, such as Campinas and Baixada Santista (São Paulo) and Vale do Aço (Minas Gerais) in the Southeast; Serra Gaúcha (Rio Grande do Sul) and Vale do Itajaí (Santa Catarina) in the South; Petrolina and Caruaru (Pernambuco) and Ribeira Alta (Piauí) and Feira de Santana (Bahia) in the Northeast; Santarém (Pará) in the North.

Languages
Brazil has one official language, Portuguese, spoken by almost the entire population and compulsory taught in all schools in the country, used in the media, in business and for administrative purposes. Portuguese is considered an important part of the country's national identity, with the Empire of Brazil being the only lusophone in America.

Brazilian Portuguese had its own development, influenced by Amerindian, African and other European languages. As a result, this variant is slightly different, mainly in phonology, from Lusitanian Portuguese. These differences are comparable to those between American English and British English. In 2008, the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP), which includes representatives from all countries whose official language is Portuguese, reached an agreement on the standardization of the language's spelling, with the aim of reducing the differences between the two variants. All CPLP countries were given a period of 2009 to 2016 to adapt to the necessary changes.

Minority languages are spoken throughout the country. The 2010 census counted 305 indigenous ethnic groups in Brazil, who speak 274 different languages. Of the indigenous people aged five or more, 37.4% spoke an indigenous language and 76.9% spoke Portuguese. There are also significant communities of German (mostly Hunsrückisch, a High German dialect) and Italian (mainly Talian, of Venetian origin) speakers in the south of the country, which are influenced by the Portuguese language.

In addition to these, there are recognized regional languages that vary from region to region of the country, in addition to some variants of the Portuguese language itself. Some other languages spoken are;

Ethnic composition
According to the 2015 IBGE census, number% are White (about number million), number% are Pardos (about number million), number% are Black (about number million), number% are something (about number million), number% are Indigenous (about number million), and number% are Asian (about number thousand).

In the 19th century, Brazil opened its borders to immigration. About six million people from over number countries migrated to Brazil between year and year, most of them from Germany, Italy, England, Russia, Poland, Spain, France, Greece, Japan, the Middle East and parts of Africa.

A unique feature of Brazil among other developed countries is its lack of racial enclaves. Unlike countries like the country, where blacks and whites usually have their own separate neighborhoods, or countries, where Muslim or Afro-descendant communities have separate neighborhoods from whites, in Brazil this is, if not non-existent, at least rare. Brazilian culture is usually more welcoming and this racial integration, for example with Muslim communities, is "crucial for public order and the integration of immigrants into Brazilian society", says sociologist name, who exposes the rarity of problems with the integration of immigrants in Brazil, different from European countries, for example.

Government and Politics
The Empire of Brazil is formed by the union of number Federative Units: number Provinces and an Imperial District (the official capital). Despite being a monarchy, Brazil receives some republican influence. In this way, the provinces function as small republics federated by the Crown, or Central Government. The Brazilian Constitution, in force since 1824, establishes the "quadripartite" branches of government, the Executive, the Legislative, the Judiciary, in addition to the Moderator. The executive and the legislature are organized independently in all spheres of government, while the judiciary is organized only at the national level and in the provincial/Imperial District spheres. The moderating power is exclusive to the monarch. Members of the Legislative Body are directly elected. Judges and other court officials are appointed after passing entrance exams. Voting is optional and can be exercised by literate people between 16 and 80 years old. Almost all government and administrative functions are carried out by authorities and agencies affiliated with the Executive. The form of government is a parliamentary constitutional monarchy. Constitutionally, or Emperor, unlike most other monarchies, is not sovereign, but a servant of sovereignty, which belongs to the people. The Monarch is the head of state of Brazil, and holds the Moderating Power. The Prime Minister is the Head of the Government of Her Imperial Majesty, who, assisted by the Secretary General of State and the Ministers of State, exercises the highest administrative direction of the country. The current Emperor is D. Luiz II of Brazil, crowned in 2010 after the resignation of his brother Emperor D. Rafael of Brazil. Currently, the Head of the Government of His Imperial Majesty is the President of the Council of Ministers of the Empire of Brazil Ciro Gomes, leader of the Brazilian Labor Party and member of the Chamber of deputies of the Empire of Brazil for the Province of Ceará. Prime Minister Gomes has been in office since date.

Parliament
The Parliament of the Empire of Brazil is a bicameral legislature of the Union, composed of the Chamber of Deputies of the Empire of Brazil (Low Chamber) and the Senate of the Empire of Brazil (High Chamber). The Senate has (000) seats. The House of Representatives has (000) members. The Parliament - the union between the Senate and the Chamber, swore in the Prime Minister. Each parliamentarian in the Chamber of Deputies has a mandate of 4 years, at the most, and are entitled to undetermined re-elections. The Senate works differently since (see in more depth later). The Constitution provides for a multi-party system, with (number) major parties: (names).

Law
Brazilian law is based on the civil code tradition, part of the Roman-Germanic system. Thus, civil law concepts prevail over common law practices. Most Brazilian legislation is codified, although non-codified statutes are a substantial part of the system, playing a complementary role. Court rulings and explanatory guidance, however, are not binding on other specific cases, except in certain situations.

Doctrinal works and the works of academic jurists have a strong influence on the creation of law and on cases of law. The legal system is based on the Constitution, which was enacted on (date) and is the fundamental law of Brazil. All other legislation and decisions of courts of law must correspond to its principles. Provinces have their own constitutions, which must not conflict with the national constitution. Municipalities and the Capital District do not have their own constitutions; instead, they have organic laws. Legislative bodies are the main source of statutes, although, on certain issues, bodies of the judiciary and executive branches may enact legal norms.

Jurisdiction is administered by entities of the Brazilian judiciary, although in rare situations the Federal Constitution allows the Federal Senate to interfere in judicial decisions. There are specialized jurisdictions such as the Military Court, the Labor Court and the Electoral Court. The highest court is the Imperial Supreme Court. This system has been criticized in recent decades due to the slowness with which final decisions are issued. Appeal lawsuits can take several years to resolve and, in some cases, over a decade to expire before final decisions are made.

Crime and Law Application
In Brazil, the constitution provides for three different police institutions, which are not subordinate to each other, for the execution of the law: the Imperial Federal Police, the National Police, the Coast Guard, all linked to the central government. Still according to a constitution, it is up to the provinces or the role of organizing their police, where it is a police force responsible for a National Police. All police institutions are the responsibility of the executive branch of any of the federal or provincial governments.

According to a constitution, the function of the Imperial Federal Police is to curb and investigate crimes committed against the Union or that have national or international repercussions, such as terrorism, international drug trafficking, illegal immigration, embezzlement, among others.

The function of the National Police is ostensive police and maintenance of public order and investigation of criminal offenses that occur in the territories under its jurisdiction, in addition to exercising the function of airport, border and road police on federal highways. The National Police can also act in support of the provincial police in situations of public disturbance, originating anywhere in the national territory.

The Coast Guard's function is to exercise the role of maritime and customs police, curbing and investigating criminal offenses committed in the exclusive economic zone, such as smuggling, embezzlement, illegal immigration, among others, in addition to overseeing and combating environmental crimes. The Coast Guard serves as an auxiliary reserve for the Imperial Brazilian Navy.

Also according to the constitution, the provincial police are responsible for ostensive police functions and maintenance of public order and investigation of criminal offenses, in addition to being, together with the National Police, the force and reserve of the Imperial Brazilian Army. In some provinces it is up to the police to organize and maintain fire departments.

Despite being one of the most severe in the world, it is considered by many of the most modern and humanist ones. The death penalty is not practiced in the country, it was abolished by D.Pedro II for cases of common crimes,. The maximum penalty is therefore, by the Constitution, life imprisonment.