Brazil
Founded
in 1914 and affiliated to FIFA since 1923, the Confederaçao Brasileira
de Futebol (CBF) boasts a staggering list of honours: five FIFA World
Cups™, eight Copa Americas, four FIFA Under-20 World Cups, three FIFA
Under-17 World Cups, two FIFA Confederations Cups, four FIFA Futsal
World Cups, three FIFA Beach Soccer World Cups and dozens of continental
trophies. Few federations have left anything like the same mark on
international football.
In fact, the only
sour note for the country that produced Pele came in the final of
'their' 1950 FIFA World Cup. Watched by 174,000 stunned supporters
packed into the mythical Maracana stadium, the Seleçao let the fourth
edition of the Jules Rimet Cup slip from their grasp in a 2-1 defeat to
Uruguay.
Football occupies pride of place
in Brazil, and although Brazilians are also passionate about volleyball,
basketball, tennis, formula-one and other motor sports, only the
legendary Ayrton Senna is revered in quite the same way as the country's
most famous exponents of 'the beautiful game'.
Chief among them is O Rei,
Pele, whose name is almost synonymous with Brazilian sport itself, but a
whole raft of unique talents have worn the Seleção shirt with
distinction down the years: Leonidas, Garrincha, Didi, Vava, Zagallo,
Tostão, Zico, Jairzinho, Carlos Alberto, Socrates, Bebeto, Romario,
Cafu, Ronaldo and Roberto Carlos. The list of players who have etched
their names into the collective memory is quite literally breathtaking.
Brazilian
football continues to produce exceptional new talents, and these days
it is superstars Ronaldinho (Ronaldo de Assis Moreira) and Kaka (Ricardo
Izecson Santos Leite) who are thrilling football-lovers the world over.
History
It
is often said that the first European explorer to set foot in the
country was Spaniard Vicente Yanez Pinzon, who supposedly landed near
the site of modern-day Recife on 26 January 1500. Officially, however,
it is Portuguese Pedro Alvares Cabral who is regarded as the discoverer
of Brazil. His fleet, in search of the Indias, sailed into the South of
modern-day Bahia on 22 April 1500. Since 1530, the Portuguese Crown
implemented a colonising policy that lasted centuries and ended when Dom
Pedro I declared the country's independence on 7 September 1822.
After
1822, Brazil was governed by an imperial dynasty until a military
revolt led by Marshal Manuel Deodoro da Fonseca forced Emperor Dom Pedro
II to abdicate in November 1889. The country became a republic and,
despite a long period of instability and even military dictatorship
between 1964 and 1985, it now enjoys the fruits of democracy.
Current President Dilma Rousseff has held the post since her inauguration on 1 January 2011.
Economy
Predominantly
agrarian until recently, Brazil underwent rapid industrial growth
throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and by the 1980s possessed a
fundamentally modern, diversified economy. This development went hand in
hand with heavy exploitation of its natural resources, in particular
coal and iron ore.
Nearly a quarter of the
world's coffee comes from Brazil, with its plantations spread around the
states of Sao Paulo, Parana, Espiríto Santo and Minas Gerais. Likewise,
Brazil is one of the foremost producers of sugar cane, used not only to
make sugar but also the alcohol that fuels 2.5 million
specially-designed vehicles. Production levels of ricin, cocoa, corn and
oranges are among the highest in the world as well, while soy, tobacco,
potato, cotton, rice, wheat, manioc and bananas are also produced in
large quantities. In addition, sheep and cattle are reared in almost
every state.
The Brazilian rainforest is
another source of natural riches, including tung oil, rubber, carnauba
oil, caroa fibre, medicinal plants, vegetable oils, resins, timber for
construction and various woods used in furniture-making. Brazil has also
begun mining fairly recently, again taking advantage of its abundant
natural resources.
Geography
The
largest country in South America, Brazil stretches over almost half of
the continent. With the Atlantic Ocean on its eastern coastline, Brazil
shares frontiers with Venezuela, Guyana, French Guyana and Surinam to
the north. Its neighbours to the west are Argentina, Paraguay, Bolivia
and Peru, while Colombia is to the north-west and Uruguay directly
south. Of all the countries in South America, only Chile and Ecuador do
not border Brazil.
With a surface area of
8,547,404 km², Brazil is the fifth largest country on the planet behind
Russia, China, Canada and the United States. It covers 4,345 km from
north to south between its furthest points and 4,330 km from east to
west. The highest population concentrations are along the Atlantic
coastlines, most notably in the two largest cities, Sao Paulo and Rio de
Janeiro. The capital Brasilia has a population of 2,094,000, according
to 2003 estimates, and it is situated over 1,000 km inland.
Facts and Figures
Brazil
has roughly 190 million inhabitants, making it the fifth most populated
country on Earth. Almost 75 per cent of them are Catholics, whilst
another 26 million are Protestants. Brazil's Jewish community is very
small by comparison.
The country is divided
into five regions (Centre-West, North, Northeast, South and Southeast),
which are themselves divided into 26 states plus the Federal District
that houses Brazilian capital Brasília.
Known
for its enormous hydroelectric potential, the Southeast region is the
most heavily-populated in Brazil with almost 80 million inhabitants,
roughly 40 per cent of the total. It is also the most densely-populated
(84.21 inhabitants per km²) and has the highest urbanisation rate at 90
per cent.
The official language is
Portuguese, however many Brazilians speak other languages according to
their origins. German and Italian, for example, are fairly prevalent in
the cities of the South.
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