1951 in Brazil
Events in the year 1951 in Brazil.
1951 in Brazil |
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Flag |
![]() 21 stars (1889–1960) |
Timeline of Brazilian history |
Second Brazilian Republic |
Year of Constitution: 1946 |
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Marshal Eurico Gaspar Dutra (till 31 January); Getúlio Vargas (from 31 January)
- Vice President: Nereu Ramos (till 31 January); Café Filho (from 31 January)
Governors
- Alagoas: Silvestre Pericles (till 31 January); Arnon de Mello (from 31 January)
- Amazonas: Leopoldo da Silva Amorim Neves (till 31 January); Álvaro Botelho Maia (from 31 January)
- Bahia: Otávio Mangabeira then Régis Pacheco
- Ceará: Faustino de Albuquerque (till 31 January); Raul Barbosa (from 31 January)
- Espírito Santo: Carlos Fernando Monteiro Lindenberg (till 31 January); Jones dos Santos Neves (from 31 January)
- Goiás: Hosanah Guimarães (till 31 January); Pedro Ludovico Teixeira (from 31 January)
- Maranhão:
- Mato Grosso: Jari Gomes then Fernando Corrêa da Costa
- Minas Gerais: Milton Soares Campos (till 31 January); Juscelino Kubitschek (from 31 January)
- Pará:
- till 25 January: Alberto Engelhard
- 25 January-27 January: Waldir Bouhid
- 27 January-9 February: Arnaldo Lobo
- 9 February-20 February: Abel Nunes de Figueiredo
- starting 20 February: Zacarias de Assumpção
- Paraíba: Osvaldo Trigueiro (till 31 January); José Américo de Almeida (from 31 January)
- Paraná: Moisés Lupion then Bento Munhoz da Rocha Neto
- Pernambuco: Alexandre Barbosa Lima Sobrinho (till 31 January); Agamenon Magalhães (from 31 January)
- Piauí: José da Rocha Furtado (till 31 January); Pedro Freitas (from 31 January)
- Rio de Janeiro: Macedo Soares (till 31 January); Amaral Peixoto (from 31 January)
- Rio Grande do Norte:
- until 31 January: José Augusto Varela
- 31 January-16 July: Jerome Dix - Sept Rosado Maia
- from 16 July: Silvio Piza Pedrosa
- Rio Grande do Sul: Walter Só Jobim (till 31 January); Ernesto Dornelles (from 31 January)
- Santa Catarina: Aderbal Ramos da Silva (till 31 January); Irineu Bornhausen (from 31 January)
- São Paulo: Ademar de Barros (till 31 January); Lucas Nogueira Garcez (from 31 January)
- Sergipe:
- till 31 January: Jose Rollemberg
- 31 January-17 February: João Dantas Martins dos Reis
- 17 February-12 March Edélzio Vieira de Melo
- from 12 March: Arnaldo Rollemberg Garcez
Vice governors
- Alagoas: Francisco de Menezes Pimentel (till 31 January); Antônio Guedes de Miranda (from 31 January)
- Ceará: Stênio Gomes da Silva
- Espírito Santo: José Rodrigues Sette (till 31 January); Francisco Alves Ataíde (from 31 January)
- Goiás: Jonas Ferreira Alves Duarte (from 31 January)
- Maranhão: Saturnino Bello (till 31 January); Renato Bayma Archer da Silva (from 31 January)
- Mato Grosso: João Leite de Barros (from 31 January)
- Minas Gerais: José Ribeiro Pena (till 31 January); Clóvis Salgado da Gama (from 31 January)
- Paraíba: José Targino Pereira da Costa (till 31 January); João Fernandes de Lima (from 31 January)
- Piauí: Osvaldo da Costa e Silva (till 31 January); Tertuliano Milton Brandão (from 31 January)
- Rio de Janeiro: Tarcísio Miranda (from 31 January)
- Rio Grande do Norte:
- till 31 January: Tomaz Salustino
- 31 January-16 July: Sylvio Pedroza
- from 16 July: vacant thereafter
- São Paulo: Luís Gonzaga Novelli Júnior (till 31 January); Erlindo Salzano (from 31 January)
- Sergipe: Edelzio Vieira de Melo (from 31 January)
Events
- March - Clarice Lispector returns from London with her husband, Maury Gurgel Valente, following a miscarriage.[1]
- 1 June - Última Hora, a tabloid newspaper, is founded by Samuel Wainer and personally endorsed by President Vargas.[2]
- October - João Carlos Muniz of Brazil is President of the United Nations Security Council.
- November - Elizabeth Bishop, on a traveling fellowship from Bryn Mawr College, arrives in Santos with the aim of circumnavigating South America by boat.
- date unknown
- The Brazilian Medical Association is founded.[3]
- The Escola Superior de Propaganda e Marketing is founded in São Paulo.[4]
Arts and culture
Books
- Ștefan Baciu - Analiza cuvântului dor
Films
- Agüenta Firme, Isidoro, directed by Luiz de Barros.
- Aí Vem o Barão, directed by Watson Macedo, starring Oscarito, José Lewgoy and Eliana.
- Amazon Symphony, directed by Anelio Latini, starring Almirante.
- Quando a Noite Acaba, starring Tônia Carrero.
- O Saci, directed by Rodolfo Nanni, starring Paulo Matozinho.[5]
Births
- 29 April - Vinicius Cantuária, jazz musician
- 12 July - Carlos Minc, geographer, environmentalist and politician[6]
- 14 August - Rita Segato (in Argentina), anthropologist, feminist and academic[7]
- 20 October - José Gomes Temporão, doctor and politician[8]
Deaths
- 2 August - Joseph Franz Seraph Lutzenberger, German-born architect and artist (born 1882)
- 13 November - Walter de Souza Goulart, footballer (born 1912)
References
- Edilberto Coutinho, Criaturas de papel, p. 170
- Tulchin, Joseph S.; Espach, Ralph H. (17 August 2000). Combating Corruption in Latin America. Woodrow Wilson Center Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-930365-01-8. Retrieved 28 August 2012.
- "Brazilian doctor takes office as the new president of the World Medical Association", 21 October 2011 Archived 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 13 August 2014
- ESPM official website
- "Saci comemora 60 anos | revistapontocom". Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
- "Planalto confirma Carlos Minc como novo ministro do Meio Ambiente" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2008-05-25.
- "Rita Segato" (in Spanish). CGA. December 2014. Archived from the original on 23 December 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- (in Portuguese) Biography of José Gomes Temporão at the Ministry of Health official website
See also
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