Belgian Brazilians
Total population | |
---|---|
5,490[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Brazil: Mainly Southern and Southeastern Brazil | |
Languages | |
Predominantly Portuguese. Minority speak Dutch, French and German as first language. | |
Religion | |
Christianity (mostly Roman Catholicism and Protestantism), and others | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other Brazilian and Belgian people other White Brazilian as Luxembourger, German, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Irish, British, Scandinavian, Polish, Czech, Austrian, Croat and Italian Brazilians Flemish people, Walloon people, Dutch people, French people, Luxembourgers |
Belgian Brazilian (Portuguese: bélgico-brasileiro, belga brasileiro) is a Brazilian person of full, partial, or predominantly Belgian ancestry, or a Belgian-born immigrant in Brazil.
History
[edit]Belgians have been in Brazil since colonial times. Some of the early settlers and bandeirantes from São Paulo were Belgians or had Belgian forefathers (most of them were flemings), like Cornélio de Arzam,[2] Pedro Taques (his father was a merchant from Brabant),[3] Fernão Dias Pais Leme[4] (the Leme family established itself in Portugal in the late 15th century through a merchant named Martim Leme; his descendants came to São Vicente in the beginning of the colonization of Brazil), and probably Jacques Félix (it is likely that his father was also named Jacques Félix, nicknamed "the Flemish", who was from Flanders and established himself in Santos in the early 16th century). All these settlers and their relatives had huge descent, spanning the southern and central parts of Brazil. Today it is still common to find these surnames (Leme, Taques etc.) in the interior of São Paulo state and neighboring states, through people who are descendants of those settlers.
With the independence of the country in 1822, Belgians kept coming through immigration. Many colonies were founded during the 19th century, especially in Southern Brazil, but also in São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Espirito Santo and Rio de Janeiro.[citation needed]
Belgian Colonies
[edit]- Botucatu (São Paulo – 1960);
- Taubaté (São Paulo – 1889);[5]
- Porto Feliz (São Paulo – 1888)
- Ilhota (Santa Catarina – 1845);
Notable Belgian Brazilians
[edit]- Matheus Nachtergaele, actor
- Eric Leme Walther Maleson, Bobsleigh athlete, 2002 Olympian
- Fernanda Paes Leme, actress
- Gregório Duvivier, actor, comedian and poet
- Antônio Rodrigues Arzão, bandeirante from São Paulo who found gold in what is today Minas Gerais, in 1693.
- João Havelange former president of FIFA
- José Maria Eymael politician
- Igor de Camargo
- Daniel Henrique Hostin bishop of Lages
- George Santos, Brazilian-American congressman and indicted alleged fraudster
- Sidnei Tendler, architect, visual artist and poet.
- Luís Oliveira, former Belgian international footballer
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Belgians in Brazil
- ^ "Genealogia Paulistana Título Arzam". www.arvore.net.br. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Genealogia Paulistana Título Taques Pompeus Parte 1". www.arvore.net.br. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ "Genealogia Paulistana Título Lemes Parte 1". www.arvore.net.br. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
- ^ DI LORENZO, Ana Lúcia. "Os italianos em Taubaté: o núcleo colonial do Quiririm – 1890/1920", Tese, São Paulo, 2002. p. 34