1991 in Brazil
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1991 in Brazil |
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Flag |
23 stars (1968–92) |
Timeline of Brazilian history |
History of Brazil since 1985 |
Year of Constitution: 1988 |
Events in the year 1991 in Brazil.
Incumbents[]
Federal government[]
- President: Fernando Collor de Mello[1]
- Vice President: Itamar Franco[1]
Governors[]
- Acre: (till 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Alagoas: (till 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Amapa: (from 1 January)
- Amazonas: Vivaldo Barroso Frota (till 15 March); Gilberto Mestrinho (from 15 March)
- Bahia: then Antônio Carlos Magalhães
- Ceará: Tasso Jereissati (till 15 March); Ciro Gomes (from 15 March)
- Espírito Santo: (till 15 March); Albuíno Cunha de Azeredo (from 15 March)
- Goiás: (till 15 March); Iris Rezende (from 15 March)
- Maranhão: João Alberto de Souza (till 15 March); Edison Lobão (from 15 March)
- Mato Grosso: then Jaime Campos
- Mato Grosso do Sul: (until 1 March); Pedro Pedrossian (from 1 March)
- Minas Gerais: Newton Cardoso (until 15 March); Hélio Garcia (from 15 March)
- Pará: Hélio Gueiros (until 15 March); Jader Barbalho (from 15 March)
- Paraíba: (until 15 March); Ronaldo Cunha Lima (from 15 March)
- Paraná: Alvaro Dias then
- Pernambuco: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Piauí: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Rio de Janeiro: Moreira Franco then Leonel Brizola
- Rio Grande do Norte: (until 15 March); José Agripino Maia (from 15 March)
- Rio Grande do Sul: (until 15 March); Alceu de Deus Collares (from 15 March)
- Rondônia: Jerônimo Garcia de Santana (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Roraima: (until 15 March); Ottomar de Sousa Pinto (from 15 March)
- Santa Catarina: Casildo Maldaner (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- São Paulo: Orestes Quércia (until 15 March); Luís Antônio Fleury Filho (from 15 March)
- Sergipe: Antônio Carlos Valadares (until 15 March); João Alves Filho (from 15 March)
- Tocantins: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
Vice governors[]
- Acre: (from 15 March)
- Alagoas: (from 15 March)
- Amapá: (from 1 January)
- Amazonas: (from 15 March)
- Bahia: Paulo Souto (from 15 March)
- Ceará: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Espírito Santo: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Goiás: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Maranhão: (from 15 March)
- Mato Grosso: (from 15 March)
- Mato Grosso do Sul: (until 14 March); Ary Rigo (from 15 March)
- Minas Gerais: (until 31 January); (from 15 March)
- Pará: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Paraíba: (from 15 March)
- Paraná: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Pernambuco: (from 15 March)
- Piauí: Lucídio Portela Nunes (until 31 January); (from 15 March)
- Rio de Janeiro: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Rio Grande do Norte: Garibaldi Alves (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Rio Grande do Sul: (from 15 March)
- Rondônia: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Roraima: (from 1 January)
- Santa Catarina: Antônio Carlos Konder Reis (from 15 March)
- São Paulo: vacant (until 15 March); Aloysio Nunes (from 15 March)
- Sergipe: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
- Tocantins: (until 15 March); (from 15 March)
Events[]
- 1 January - Amapá, a former territory, becomes Brazil's 26th state. It was the most recent state to be established in the country.[2]
Births[]
- 4 April – Lucas Lucco, singer, songwriter and actor
- 9 April – Sancler Frantz, model and journalist
- 21 June – Bruno Aquino, footballer
- 26 June – Jesuíta Barbosa, actor
- 28 August – Humberto Carrão, actor
- 3 September – Maurício Destri, actor
- 16 September – Marlon Teixeira, model
- 2 October – Roberto Firmino, footballer
- 6 November – Camila Finn, model
Deaths[]
- 17 January – Antônio Villas Boas, farmer who claimed alien abduction (born 1934)[3]
- 31 July – João Chedid, Maronite bishop (born )[4]
- 4 December – Moysés Baumstein, holographer and artist (born 1931)
See also[]
References[]
- ^ a b Phillips, Tom (3 July 2011). "Itamar Franco obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ The Business One Irwin International Almanac: Business and Investments. Business One Irwin. 1993. p. 74. ISBN 978-1-55623-877-2.
- ^ Cláudio Tsuyoshi Suenaga. Caso Vilas-Boas, 50 anos depois, Ufo. Campo Grande: Mythos Editora, ano 24, nº 137, dez. 2007, p. 34-35.
- ^ "João Chedid". Catholic Hierarchy. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
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