1961 in Brazil
Events in the year 1961 in Brazil.
| 1961 in Brazil | 
|---|
| Flag | 
![]() 22 stars (1960–68)  | 
| Timeline of Brazilian history | 
| Second Brazilian Republic | 
| Year of Constitution: 1946 | 
Incumbents
    
    Federal government
    
- President: 
- Juscelino Kubitschek (until 30 January)
 - Jânio Quadros (from 31 January to 25 August)
 - Ranieri Mazzilli (from 25 August to September 7)
 - João Goulart (starting September 7)
 
 - Prime Minister: Tancredo Neves (starting 8 September)
 - Vice President: 
- João Goulart (until 25 August)
 - Vacant (from August 25)
 
 
Governors
    
- Alagoas: 
- Sebastião Muniz Falcão (until 31 January)
 - Luis Cavalcante (from 31 January)
 
 - Amazonas: Gilberto Mestrinho
 - Bahia: Juracy Magalhães
 - Ceará: Parsifal Barroso
 - Espírito Santo:Raul Giuberti
 - Goiás: 
- José Feliciano Ferreira (until 31 January)
 - Mauro Borges (from 31 January)
 
 - Guanabara: Carlos Lacerda
 - Maranhão: Newton de Barros Belo (from 31 January)
 - Mato Grosso: 
- João Ponce de Arruda (until 31 January)
 - Fernando Corrêa da Costa (from 31 January)
 
 - Minas Gerais: 
- José Francisco Bias Fortes (until 31 January)
 - José de Magalhães Pinto (from 31 January)
 
 - Pará: 
- Luís de Moura Carvalho (until 31 January)
 - Aurélio do Carmo (from 31 January)
 
 - Paraíba: 
- José Fernandes de Lima (until 31 January)
 - Pedro Gondim (from 31 January)
 
 - Paraná: 
- Moisés Lupion (until 31 January)
 - Nei Braga (from 31 January)
 
 - Pernambuco: Cid Sampaio
 - Piauí: Chagas Rodrigues
 - Rio de Janeiro: 
- Roberto Silveira (until 28 February)
 - Celso Peçanha (from 28 February)
 
 - Rio Grande do Norte: 
- Dinarte de Medeiros Mariz (until 31 January)
 - Aluízio Alves (from 31 January)
 
 - Rio Grande do Sul: Leonel Brizola
 - Santa Catarina: 
- Heriberto Hülse (until 31 January)
 - Celso Ramos (from 31 January)
 
 - São Paulo: Carlos Alberto Alves de Carvalho Pinto
 - Sergipe: Luís Garcia
 
Vice governors
    
- Alagoas: 
- Sizenando Nabuco de Melo (until 31 January)
 - Teotônio Brandão Vilela (from 31 January)
 
 - Bahia: Orlando Moscoso
 - Ceará: Wilson Gonçalves
 - Espírito Santo: Raul Giuberti
 - Goiás: 
- João de Abreu (until 31 January)
 - Antônio Rezende Monteiro (from 31 January)
 
 - Maranhão: 
- Alexandre Alves Costa (until 31 January)
 - Alfredo Salim Duailibe (from 31 January)
 
 - Mato Grosso: 
- Henrique José Vieira Neto (until 31 January)
 - Jose Garcia Neto (from 31 January)
 
 - Minas Gerais: 
- Artur Bernardes Filho (until 31 January)
 - Clóvis Salgado da Gama (from 31 January)
 
 - Pará: Newton Burlamaqui de Miranda (from 31 January)
 - Paraíba: 
- Pedro Gondim (until 31 January)
 - André Avelino de Paiva Gadelha (from 31 January)
 
 - Pernambuco: Pelópidas da Silveira
 - Piauí: Tibério Nunes
 - Rio de Janeiro: 
- Celso Peçanha (until 1 March)
 - Vacant thereafter (from 31 January)
 
 - Rio Grande do Norte: 
- José Augusto Varela (until 31 January)
 - Walfredo Gurgel (from 31 January)
 
 - Santa Catarina: Armindo Marcílio Doutel de Andrade (from 31 January)
 - São Paulo: Porfírio da Paz
 - Sergipe: Dionísio Machado
 
Events
    
    January
    
- January 31: Jânio Quadros becomes the 22nd President of Brazil, succeeding Juscelino Kubitschek.[1]
 
August
    
- August 25-September 7: The Legality Campaign takes place, which aims to defend the inauguration of João Goulart as President of Brazil. [2][3]
 - August 25: Jânio Quadros resigns as President of the Republic. The President of the Chamber of Deputies, Ranieri Mazzilli, takes over as the 23rd President of Brazil on an interim basis.[4]
 
September
    
- September 2: The National Congress of Brazil approves Constitutional Amendment No. 4, which establishes parliamentarism.[5]
 - September 7: João Goulart is sworn in as the 24th President of Brazil.[6]
 - September 8: The National Congress of Brazil approves the constitution of the first Council of Ministers.[7]
 
November
    
- November 1: A Panair do Brasil plane crashes near Recife airport, leaving 45 dead and 43 injured.[8]
 - November 23: Brazil restores diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union, 14 years after their breakup.[9]
 
December
    
- December 17: An arson fire at the Niterói circus, kills more than 300 people and becomes the worst fire disaster in Brazilian history.[10][11][12]
 - December 20: Adilson Marcelino Alves, known as Dequinha, is arrested by the Rio de Janeiro police and confesses to being responsible for the fire at the Niterói circus.[13]
 
Births
    
    January
    
- January 1 – Rita Camata, politician and journalist
 
March
    
- 7 March – Miguel Nicolelis, scientist
 
September
    
- 8 September – Fernanda Abreu, singer
 
Deaths
    
    April
    
- April 25 – Borges de Medeiros, lawyer and politician (born 1863)
 
June
    
- June 22 – José de Mesquita (born 1892)
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Festas e lagimas em Brasilia na posse de Janio e despedida de JK (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (1 de fevereiro de 1961).
 - Paula, Christiane Jalles de (2004). "O segundo mandato na vice-presidência e a crise sucessória". A trajetória política de João Goulart (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
 - Keller, Vilma; Dias, Sônia; Costa, Marcelo; Freire, Americo (2001). "BRIZOLA, Leonel". Dicionário Histórico-Biográfico Brasileiro (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2021-04-15. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
 - Ranieri na Presidencia desde ontem; Jango é esperado hoje (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (26 de agosto de 1961).
 - Instituido o regime parlamentarista; o Congresso promulga o ato adicional (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (3 de setembro de 1961).
 - Às 15 horas a posse de Jango e a apresentação do Conselho (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (7 de setembro de 1961).
 - O Congresso aprova a constituição do primeiro Conselho de Ministros (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (9 de setembro de 1961).
 - Explode em Recife avião com 84 pessoas a bordo (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (2 de novembro de 1961).
 - Restabelecidas ontem as relações diplomaticas entre Brasil e URSS (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (24 de novembro de 1961).
 - "323 KILLED IN CIRCUS FIRE (December 18, 1961)". Retrieved 2017-05-23.
 - A policia deteve cerca de duzentos suspeitos de atear fogo ao circo (página 1 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (19 de dezembro de 1961).
 - 250 Feared Dead After Circus Fire (página 1 do 1° caderno), Eugene Register Guard (18 de dezembro de 1961).
 - Preso e oculto pela policia o incediario do Gran-Circo (página 22 do 1° caderno), Folha de S. Paulo (21 de dezembro de 1961).
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
.svg.png.webp)
