1968 in Brazil
Events of the year 1968 in Brazil
1968 in Brazil |
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Flag |
![]() 22 stars (1960–68) |
Timeline of Brazilian history |
Brazilian military government |
Year of Constitution: 1967 |
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Marshal Artur da Costa e Silva
- Vice-President: Pedro Aleixo
Governors
- Acre: vacant
- Alagoas: Antônio Simeão de Lamenha Filho
- Amazonas: Danilo Duarte de Matos Areosa
- Bahia: Luís Viana Filho
- Ceará: Plácido Castelo
- Espírito Santo: Cristiano Dias Lopes Filho
- Goiás: Otávio Lage
- Maranhão: Jose Sarney
- Mato Grosso: Pedro Pedrossian
- Minas Gerais: Israel Pinheiro da Silva
- Pará: Alacid Nunes
- Paraíba: João Agripino Maia
- Paraná: Pablo Cruz Pimentel
- Pernambuco: Nilo Coelho
- Piauí: Helvídio Nunes
- Rio de Janeiro: Geremias Fontes
- Rio Grande do Norte: Walfredo Gurgel Dantas
- Rio Grande do Sul: Walter Peracchi Barcelos
- Santa Catarina: Ivo Silveira
- São Paulo: Roberto Costa de Abreu Sodré
- Sergipe: Lourival Baptista
Vice governors
- Alagoas: Manoel Sampaio Luz
- Amazonas: Rui Arajuo
- Bahia: Jutahy Magalhães
- Ceará: Humberto Ellery
- Espírito Santo: Isaac Lopes Rubim
- Goiás: Osires Teixeira
- Maranhão: Antonio Jorge Dino
- Mato Grosso: Lenine de Campos Póvoas
- Minas Gerais: Pio Soares Canedo
- Pará: João Renato Franco
- Paraíba: Antônio Juarez Farias
- Paraná: Plínio Franco Ferreira da Costa
- Pernambuco: Salviano Machado Filho
- Piauí: João Clímaco d'Almeida
- Rio de Janeiro: Heli Ribeiro Gomes
- Rio Grande do Norte: Clóvis Motta
- Santa Catarina: Jorge Bornhausen
- São Paulo: Hilário Torloni
- Sergipe: vacant
Events
March
- 28 March – Student Edson Luís de Lima Souto is shot dead by a police officer in a protest at the restaurant Calabouço, in Rio de Janeiro.[1]
May
- 26 May – Doctor Euryclides de Jesus Zerbini performs the first heart transplant in Latin America.
- 28 May – A 23rd star representing the state of Acre, established six years before, is added to the flag of Brazil.
June
- 26 June – March of the One Hundred Thousand held in Rio de Janeiro against the military dictatorship.[2]
November
- 2 November – Queen Elizabeth II visits Brazil.[3]
December
- 13 December – Institucional Act Number 5 (AI-5) proclaimed, giving the president the powers to intervene on local governments, suspend the Congress, ban political meetings, and censor the press, music and film.[4]
Births
- 20 July – Carlos Saldanha, director
- 18 November – Luizianne Lins, politician
Deaths
- 4 April – Assis Chateaubriand, entrepreneur (b. 1892).
- 13 October – Manuel Bandeira, poet (b. 1886).
References
- "Jornal do Brasil - Pesquisa de arquivos de notícias Google". news.google.com. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
- Alves, Maria Helena Moreira (1988-07-01). State and Opposition in Military Brazil. University of Texas Press. ISBN 9780292776173.
- Pages, Digital. "Folha de S.Paulo - Edição de 02/11/1968". acervo.folha.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
- Dunn, Christopher (2016-10-13). Contracultura: Alternative Arts and Social Transformation in Authoritarian Brazil. UNC Press Books. ISBN 9781469628523.
See also
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