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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Etymology  





2 Geography  



2.1  Regions  





2.2  Hydrology  







3 History  



3.1  Prehistory  





3.2  European contact  





3.3  Portuguese settlement  



3.3.1  Slavery  







3.4  Dutch conquest  





3.5  Jewish immigration  





3.6  Portuguese reconquest  





3.7  Three centuries of the sugar cycle  



3.7.1  17th-century class conflict  





3.7.2  18th century: mining eclipses sugar  





3.7.3  19th century: a province, then a state  





3.7.4  The end of slavery and the beginning of the republic  





3.7.5  20th century  







3.8  Post-dictatorship progress  







4 Government and politics  



4.1  Local government  





4.2  Federal representation  







5 Demographics  



5.1  Population  





5.2  Religion  





5.3  Racial/Ethnic composition  





5.4  Largest cities  





5.5  Education  



5.5.1  Higher education  









6 Economy  



6.1  Livestock  





6.2  Agriculture  





6.3  Ethanol  





6.4  Industry  







7 Infrastructure  



7.1  Airports  





7.2  Ports  





7.3  Railways  





7.4  Roads  







8 Festivals  



8.1  Carnival  





8.2  Saint John's Day  





8.3  Winter Festival  







9 Tourism and recreation  





10 Main cities  





11 Sports  





12 Gallery  





13 See also  





14 References  














Pernambuco






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Coordinates: 8°20S 37°48W / 8.333°S 37.800°W / -8.333; -37.800
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Pernambuco
Estado de Pernambuco
State of Pernambuco
Coat of arms of Pernambuco
Motto(s): 
Ego sum qui fortissimum et dux (Latin)
"I am the strongest and the one who leads"
Anthem: Hino de Pernambuco
Location of State of Pernambuco in Brazil
Location of State of Pernambuco in Brazil
Coordinates: 8°20′S 37°48′W / 8.333°S 37.800°W / -8.333; -37.800
Country Brazil
Capital and largest cityRecife
Government
 • GovernorRaquel Lyra (PSDB)
 • Vice GovernorPriscila Krause (Cidadania)
 • Senators
  • Jarbas Vasconcelos (MDB)
  • Teresa Leitão (PT)
  • Area
     • Total98,067.877 km2 (37,864.219 sq mi)
     • Rank19th
    Population
     (2022)[1]
     • Total9,058,931
     • Rank7th
     • Density92/km2 (240/sq mi)
      • Rank6th
    Demonym(s)Pernambucan (English), PernambucanoorPernambucana (Brazilian Portuguese)
    GDP
     • TotalR$ 220.814 billion
    (US$ 40.961 billion)
    HDI
     • Year2021
     • Category0.719[3]high (15th)
    Time zonesUTC−3 (BRT)
    UTC−2 (FNT)
    Postal Code
    50000-000 to 56990-000
    ISO 3166 codeBR-PE
    License Plate Letter SequenceKFD to KME, NXU to NXW, OYL to OYZ, PCA to PGZ, QYA to QYZ, RZE to RZZ
    Websitepe.gov.br

    Pernambuco (Brazilian Portuguese: [pɛʁnɐ̃ˈbuku] ) is a stateofBrazil, located in the Northeast region of the country. With an estimated population of 9 million people as of 2022, it is the seventh-most populous state of Brazil and with around 98,067.877 km2, it is the 19th-largest in area among federative units of the country. It is also the sixth-most densely populated with around 89 people per km2. Its capital and largest city, Recife, is one of the most important economic and urban hubs in the country. Based on 2019 estimates, the Recife Metropolitan Region is seventh-most populous in the country, and the second-largest in northeastern Brazil.[4] In 2015, the state had 4.4% of the national population and produced 2.8% of the national gross domestic product (GDP).[5]

    The contemporary state inherits its name from the Captaincy of Pernambuco, established in 1534. The region was originally inhabited by Tupi–Guarani-speaking peoples. European colonization began in the 16th century, under mostly Portuguese rule interrupted by a brief period of Dutch rule, followed by Brazilian independence in 1822. Large numbers of slaves were brought from Africa during the colonial era to cultivate sugarcane, and a significant portion of the state's population has some amount of African ancestry.

    The state has rich cultural traditions thanks to its varied history and peoples. Brazilian Carnivals in Recife and the historic colonial capital of Olinda are renowned: the Galo da Madrugada parade in Recife has held world records for its size.

    Historically a center of sugarcane cultivation due to the favorable climate, the state has a modern economy dominated by the services sector today, though large amounts of sugarcane are still grown. The coming of democracy in 1985 has brought the state progress and challenges in turn: while economic and health indicators have improved, inequality remains high.

    Etymology[edit]

    The origins of the name Pernambuco are debated, though most hypotheses derive the name from the now-extinct Tupi language.

    Some scholars claim that the name comes from the combining of the Tupi words para'nã, meaning "great river" or "sea" and buka, meaning "hole". Thus, pernambuco would mean "hole in the sea", possibly referring to the Canal de Santa Cruz on the Island of Itamaracá, north of Olinda, or to an opening in the reefs between Olinda and Recife.[6] According to others, pernambuco was the name of brazilwood in local indigenous languages at the time of first contact, as the tree is found widely in the forests of the future state. A third hypothesis also derives from a Tupi word, paranãbuku, meaning "long river", a possible reference to the Capibaribe River, since primitive maps mark such a "Pernambuco river" north of Cabo de Santo Agostinho, south of Recife.

    Another hypothesis, suggested by the academic Jacques Ribemboim, asserts the origins of the name from the Portuguese language. The Canal de Santa Cruz in Recife, at the beginning of the 16th century, was known as Boca de Fernão (named after the explorer Fernão de Noronha). The Indians may have pronounced FernãoasPernao and reversed the order of the words, giving Pernão BocaorPernambuka, leading to the contemporary name of Pernambuco.[7]

    The state also has some nicknames, such as Lion of the North, Land of Frevo and Maracatu and Blessed Land.

    Geography[edit]

    The Fernando de Noronha Islands, 354 km from the mainland, form a "state district" of Pernambuco.

    Pernambuco comprises a comparatively narrow coastal zone, a high inland plateau, and an intermediate zone formed by the terraces and slopes between the two.[8]

    Its surface is much broken by the remains of the ancient plateau which has been worn down by erosion, leaving escarpments and ranges of flat-topped mountains, called chapadas, capped in places by horizontal layers of sandstone. Ranges of these chapadas form the boundary lines with three states–the Serra dos Irmãos and Serra Vermelha with Piauí, the Serra do Araripe with Ceará, and the Serra dos Cariris Velhos with Paraíba.[8]

    Old Recife
    Köppen climate types of Pernambuco

    Regions[edit]

    The coastal area is fertile, and was formerly covered by the humid Pernambuco coastal forests, the northern extension of the Atlantic Forests (Mata Atlântica) of eastern Brazil. It is now occupied by extensive sugar cane plantations. It has a hot, humid climate, relieved to some extent by the south-east trade winds.[8]

    Catimbau Valley - the 2nd-largest Brazilian archeological site

    The middle zone, called the agreste region, has a drier climate and lighter vegetation,[8] including the semi-deciduous Pernambuco interior forests, where many trees lose their leaves in the dry season.

    The inland region, called the sertão is high, stony, and dry, and frequently devastated by prolonged droughts (secas). The climate is characterized by hot days and cool nights. There are two clearly defined seasons, a rainy season from March to June, and a dry season for the remaining months.[8] The interior of the state is covered mostly by the dry thorny scrub vegetation called caatinga. The Rio São Francisco is the main water source for this area.

    Boa Viagem Beach

    The climate is more mild in the Borborema Plateau ("Planalto da Borborema"). Some towns are located more than 1000 meters above sea level, and temperatures there can descend to 10 °C (50 °F) and even 5 °C (41 °F) in some cities (i.e., Triunfo) during the winter.

    The volcanic archipelago of Fernando de Noronha in the Atlantic Ocean, 535 km northeast of Recife, has been part of Pernambuco since 1988.

    Hydrology[edit]

    The rivers of the state include a number of small plateau streams flowing southward to the São Francisco River, and several large streams in the eastern part flowing eastward to the Atlantic. The former are the Moxotó, Ema, Pajeú, Terra Nova, Brigida, Boa Vista and Pontai, and are dry channels the greater part of the year.[8]

    The largest of the coastal rivers are the Goiana River, which is formed by the confluence of the Tracunhaem and Capibaribe-mirim, and drains a rich agricultural region in the north-east part of the state; the Capibaribe, which has its source in the Serra de Jacarara and flows eastward to the Atlantic at Recife with a course of nearly 300 miles (480 km); the Ipojuca, which rises in the Serra de Aldeia Velha and reaches the coast south of Recife; the Serinhaen; and the Uná. A large tributary of the Uná, the Rio Jacuhipe, forms part of the boundary line with Alagoas.[8]

    History[edit]

    Prehistory[edit]

    Prior to discovery and colonization by Portugal, Pernambuco was inhabited by numerous tribes of Tupi-Guarani speaking indigenous peoples. The Tupi peoples were a largely hunter-gatherer culture living in long houses who cultivated some indigenous crops, most notably manioc (Manihot esculenta), but lacked any metallic tools. Many elements of the Tupi culture were a shock to Europeans: among these, they bathed frequently, they eschewed wealth accumulation, practiced nudity, and warred frequently, primarily to capture enemies for communal, ritual cannibalism.[9]

    European contact[edit]

    Modern day Pernambuco includes the islands of Fernando de Noronha, which precedes mainland Pernambuco's history since the islands were granted to Fernão de Laronha by King Manoel in 1502.[10]

    Pernambuco was initially valued as a source of Brazilwood (Caesalpinia echinata) used in Europe for dyes. These Amerindians were eager to harvest and exchange brazilwood for axes, fishhooks and other goods offered by Europeans.[11] The Portuguese crown granted a license to Fernão de Laronha in 1502.[12] After the expiration of the license the trade in brazilwood was a driver of the exploration of Brazil. Brazilwood was highly valued and other European nations, particularly the French, soon sent ships to exploit this new dye wood. The French under Bertrand d'Ornesan tried to establish a French trading post at Pernambuco in 1531.[13] This fort was located at the border of Pernambuco and Itamaricá to the North. The Portuguese King responded by dispatching an armada under the command of Pero Lopes de Sousa. Pero Lopes defeated the French, destroyed their fort and built a new fort.[14]

    Portuguese settlement[edit]

    The historic centre of Olinda, a World Heritage Site

    Shortly after the success in dislodging the French from Pernambuco's northern border with Itamaricá the Portuguese began to settle Brazil. King John III of Portugal created the Hereditary Captaincies in 1534, Pernambuco was granted to Duarte Coelho, who arrived in Nova Lusitânia (or "New Lusitania") in 1535. Duarte directed military actions against the French-allied Caetés Indians and upon their defeat in 1537 established a settlement at the site of a former Marin Indian village, henceforth known as Olinda, as well as another village at Igarassu. Under his leadership sugar soon replaced Brazilwood as Pernambuco's most profitable export.[15] Due to the cultivation of sugar and cotton, Pernambuco was one of the few prosperous captaincies (the other notable one being São Vicente).

    Slavery[edit]

    In addition to requiring a lot of capital investment, refining sugar in the 16th century also required a vast amount of labor. Brazilian Indians were very useful to the Portuguese; both free Indians and enslaved Indians performed many useful services for the Portuguese settlers. This included helping with building Engenhos. However, Brazilian Indian culture was not well suited to the operation of sugar engenhos. Indian culture was not oriented to wealth accumulation. Stuart Schwartz expressed it, "Once a man had enough to eat and a few new tools and weapons, why should he want or work for more."[16]

    While the sugar industry relied at first on the labor of indigenous peoples, especially the Tupis and Tapuyas, high mortality and economic growth led to the importation of enslaved Africans from the late 17th century onward. Some of these slaves escaped the sugar-producing coastal regions and formed independent inland communities called mocambos, including Palmares.

    Dutch conquest[edit]

    Dutch invasions in Brazil
    John Maurice, Prince of Nassau-Siegen

    In 1630, Pernambuco, as well as many Portuguese possessions in Brazil, was occupied by the Dutch until 1654.[8] The occupation was strongly resisted and the Dutch conquest was only partially successful for these few decades. In the interim, thousands of the enslaved Africans had fled to Palmares, and soon the mocambos there had grown into two significant states. The Dutch Republic, which allowed sugar production to remain in Portuguese hands, regarded suppression of Palmares as important, but was unsuccessful in this. Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen, count of Nassau, was appointed as ruler of the Nieuw Holland (Dutch colonization enterprise in Brazil).

    In the 17th century, the Netherlands was experiencing a surge of freedom and progress, and wanted to expand their colonies in the American continent. An expression of this new economy was the Dutch West India Company, (modeled after the Dutch East India company which had influence throughout the world and controlled much of the trade between East and West). A Board of nineteen members appointed Prince Johan Maurits, Count of Nassau, Governor of Pernambuco. It was an auspicious choice for Northeast, because he was a lover of the arts with a deep interest in the New World. In 1637 he opened his government guidelines quite different from those of the Portuguese colonists, declaring "Freedom of Religion and Trade". His entourage contained traders, artists, planners, German and Dutch citizens. He was accompanied by six painters, including Frans Post and Albert Eckhout. Nassau also created an environment of Dutch religious tolerance, new to Portuguese America and irritating to his Calvinist associates. Nassau made efforts to reduce the sugar production monoculture by encouraging the cultivation of other crops, particularly foodstuffs.[17]

    Olinda and Recife, 1953.

    Jewish immigration[edit]

    Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue in Mauritsstad (Recife), the first synagogue in the Americas

    Under Dutch rule, Jewish culture developed in Recife. Many Jews, having fled the Inquisition in Iberia, sought refuge in the Netherlands. The Jewish community established themselves in Dutch Brazil and would later migrate elsewhere in the Americas. There are records that in 1636 a synagogue was being built in the city. A Jewish scholar from Amsterdam, Isaac Aboab da Fonseca, arrived in Recife in 1642, becoming the first rabbi on Brazilian soil and on the continent. In 1643, three years after the Portuguese regained the crown in the metropolis, Father António Vieira – frowned upon, persecuted by the Inquisition and admirer of Aboab – recommended the King of Portugal occupy the capital of the New Christian and Jewish immigrants to help the depressed Portuguese finances[18]

    Portuguese reconquest[edit]

    The Portuguese reconquered Recife in 1654 and Olinda regained its status of political center. However, Recife remained the commercial /port city. Nowadays, it is credited that many inhabitants of Pernambuco's agreste region have some Dutch ancestry.[19] If the Dutch were gone, however, the threat of the now unified quilombo of Palmares remained. In spite of a treaty negotiated in 1678 with its ruler Ganga Zumba, a war between the two remained. Zumbi who became ruler following the peace treaty and later repudiated it, fought the Portuguese government until 1694 when soldiers brought from the south eventually defeated him.

    Three centuries of the sugar cycle[edit]

    Throughout the remainder of the 17th century on to the 20th century much of life in Pernambuco was dominated by the patterns established by monoculture, latifundia, and slavery (until 1888). Sugar and cotton were grown on large plantations and rural society was largely divided into landowning elites and the impoverished poor. In addition, Pernambuco, except for a narrow coastland, is subject to periodic droughts. The boom and bust economy throughout this period is often exemplified as the "sugar cycle" when the international market for sugar is good, the economy booms, when the market is bad, it is hard times for all and particularly for the impoverished. Sugar has always been the principal example of the boom or bust cycle, but there has, from time to time been a similar cycle in cotton. Cotton was profitable during the U.S. War of Independence, the War of 1812, and the U.S. Civil War. Each time the bust in Pernambuco came when U.S. growers resumed their exports.[20]

    17th-century class conflict[edit]

    A sugar mill engenho requires a large investment both to build and to operate. Much of the time the money is borrowed. Although there were other sources, one source that was a particular irritant to mill owners were the merchants of Recife. In 1710 this irritant resulted in the Mascate War. This conflict set the mascates from Recife against the establishment planters of Olinda It was led by the Senhores de Engenho (owners of the sugar mills). It is an example of the continuing tensions between the senhores de engenho (the landed elites) in colonial Brazil and the merchants of Recife. The "War" (there was considerable shooting but little loss of life) has elements of class struggle. Olinda had, before the Dutch, always been the municipal seat. Recife, once merely a port facility for Olinda, had formerly consisted of a few modest dwellings, warehouses, and businesses catering to ships and seamen, but under the Dutch had been developed into a thriving center of commerce populated by wealthy, more recently arrived merchants to whom most of the landed aristocracy of Pernambuco were heavily indebted. After several excesses the king issued a new set of instructions to the governor. In 1715 the crown dispatched a new governor and the residents of Pernambuco finally felt the troubles were ended, though many families of the colony's elites were ruined.[21]

    18th century: mining eclipses sugar[edit]

    The discovery of gold in Minas Gerais late in the Seventeenth Century and the discovery of diamond displaced agriculture. In fact, for all the disruption caused by "gold fever" throughout the mining boom the value of sugar exports always exceeded the value of any other export.[22] Nevertheless, among many other disruptions, gold shifted the focus South. Pernambuco, Bahia, and the entire Northeast were eclipsed by the South of Brazil and that shift in focus has never been reversed.[23]

    19th century: a province, then a state[edit]

    Pernambuco's response to the nationhood of Brazil seems to have been rebellion. Pernambuco was the site of some of the most important rebellions and insurrections in Brazilian history, especially in the 19th century. See Also Rebellions and revolutions in Brazil, Pernambucan Revolt, Cabanada, April Revolt (Pernambuco) At one point Pernambuco led much of the Northeast region in a very short-lived independent Confederation of the Equator.

    The end of slavery and the beginning of the republic[edit]

    In 1888, under the influence of increasingly urban society, and with the advocacy of intellectuals such as Pernambucan politician Joaquim Nabuco, slavery was abolished.[24] However, freedom for the slaves did little or nothing to improve life for the underclass. Economic downturns were used to cut wages, children were paid almost nothing, and violence ruled.[25] In those days before antibiotics there were major epidemics, fourteen between 1849 and 1920.[26]

    20th century[edit]

    Graf Zeppelin over Recife in the 1930s

    The twentieth century did bring better communication and transportation which would slowly allow development. But for the poor employed in the sugar industry, as late as the 1960s infant mortality in this labor segment was nearly half of live births.[27] Politically, the century was dominated by two periods of dictatorship, ruled by Getúlio Vargas for most of the period from 1930 to 1954.[28] and the military dictatorship from 1964 to 1985[29]

    Post-dictatorship progress[edit]

    Since the end of military rule, there is still an underemployed and under-fed underclass. However, quality of life has improved along with industrial development. Pernambuco has also become a major tourist destination. Statistics from the turn of the millennium show a sharp and continuing improvement. According to estimates from the Global Burden of Disease Study, the infant mortality rate declined 6.2 percent annually between 1990 and 2015: from 90.4 infant deaths per 1000 live births in 1990, to 13.4 deaths/1000 live births in 2015.[30] The homicide rate in Recife, still higher than the average for Brazil, declined by about 6% per annum during the period from 2000 to 2012.[31]

    Income inequality remains a problem; in 2000, the state had a Gini coefficient of 0.59,[32] with wealth and resources being concentrated at the top.

    Government and politics[edit]

    The state government is divided into three branches, like all Brazilian states. All the branches are located in capital of Recife.

    The governor and deputies are elected to four year terms in Brazilian general elections, with the most recent being held in 2022.

    Local government[edit]

    The 185 municipalities that make up the state have similar structures, though they lack the judicial branch. Each municipality has a chief executive, analogous to mayor, called a Prefeito/Prefeita, while the legislative branch is called the Câmara Municipal.

    Municipal officials also serve four year terms, with the most recent being held in 2020.

    Fernando de Noronha is a sui generis "State District" (distrito estadual), governed directly by a Pernambuco state administrator.[33]

    Federal representation[edit]

    At the federal level, Pernambuco is represented by 25 deputies in the Chamber of Deputies, and three senators in the Federal Senate.

    Demographics[edit]

    Population[edit]

    Population density by municipality (2010).
      0-23 inhabitants per km2
      23-50 per km2
      50-100 per km2
      100-150 per km2
      150-200 per km2
      200-300 per km2
      300-400 per km2
      400-500 per km2
      > 500 per km2

    According to the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), at the last census in 2022 there were 9,058,621 people residing in the state. The population is concentrated along the coast in the Recife Metropolitan Region.

    Urbanization: 77% (2006); Population growth: 1.2% (1991–2000); Houses: 2,348,000 (2006).[34]

    Religion[edit]

    Religion in Pernambuco (2010)[35][36]

      Catholicism (65.9%)
      Protestantism (20.34%)
      Other Christian (0.88%)
      Spiritism (1.41%)
      Other/No reply (1.02%)
      Unaffiliated (10.40%)

    The majority of the state's inhabitants are Catholic; while more than 86% of the state is Christian.

    In 2010, 5,834,601 inhabitants identified as Roman Catholic (65.95%), 1,788,973 as Evangelical (20.34%): of these, 1,102,485 were Pentecostal (12.53%), and 376,880 were Evangelical Protestant (4.28%) and 309,608 other Evangelical (3.52%). 123,798 inhabitants identified as spiritists (1.41%), 43,726 as Jehovah's Witnesses (0.50%), 26,526 as Brazilian Apostolic Catholics (0.30%) and 6,678 as Eastern Orthodox(0.08%).

    914,954 had no religion (10.40%): of these, 10,284 identified as atheists (0.12%) and 5,638 as agnostics (0.06%). 80,591 followed all other religions not listed above (0.90%), and 9,805 did not know or did not declare (0.12%).[35][36]

    The former Latin Catholic Territorial Prelature of Pernambuco became the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Olinda & Recife, with these suffragan dioceses in its ecclesiastical province (all in Pernambuco) : Diocese of Afogados da Ingazeira, Diocese of Caruaru, Diocese of Floresta, Diocese of Garanhuns, Diocese of Nazaré, Diocese of Palmares, Diocese of Pesqueira, Diocese of Petrolina and Diocese of Salgueiro.

    Racial/Ethnic composition[edit]

    The results of the National Household Sample Survey (PNAD) conducted in 2022 led to the following estimates of race or skin color: 5,006,802 Brown (Multiracial) people (55.3%), 3,043,916 White people (33.6%), 909,557 Black people (10.0%), 83,667 Indigenous people (0.9%) and 13,225 Asian people (0.1%).[37]

    Due to the legacy of slavery and the sugarcane plantations, it has been observed that those of mixed African and Portuguese ancestry are more common on the coast, while Mamelucos (those of mixed Amerindian and Portuguese ancestry) are more common in the interior Sertão region.[38]

    According to a genetic study from 2013, Pernambucans have 56.8% European, 27.9% African and 15.3% Amerindian ancestries.[39]

    Largest cities[edit]

     

     

    Largest cities or towns in Pernambuco

    (2011 census by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics)[40]

    Rank Municipality Pop. Rank Municipality Pop.
    Recife
    Recife
    Jaboatão dos Guararapes
    Jaboatão dos Guararapes
    1 Recife Metropolitana do Recife 1,965,441 11 São Lourenço da Mata Metropolitana do Recife 110,784 Olinda
    Olinda
    Caruaru
    Caruaru
    2 Jaboatão dos Guararapes Metropolitana do Recife 654,727 12 Igarassu Metropolitana do Recife 108,536
    3 Olinda Metropolitana do Recife 401,537 13 Abreu e Lima Metropolitana do Recife 94,965
    4 Caruaru Agreste Pernambucano 336,519 14 Santa Cruz do Capibaribe Agreste Pernambucano 90,772
    5 Paulista Metropolitana do Recife 303,400 15 Ipojuca Metropolitana do Recife 84,276
    6 Petrolina São Francisco Pernambucano 302,757 16 Serra Talhada Sertão Pernambucano 81,871
    7 Cabo de Santo Agostinho Metropolitana do Recife 187,158 17 Araripina Sertão Pernambucano 81,794
    8 Camaragibe Metropolitana do Recife 151,676 18 Gravatá Agreste Pernambucano 77,300
    9 Vitória de Santo Antão Mata Pernambucana 131,923 19 Goiana Mata Pernambucana 76,565
    10 Garanhuns Agreste Pernambucano 130,303 20 Carpina Mata Pernambucana 75,989
    Historical population
    YearPop.±%
    1872841,539—    
    18901,030,224+22.4%
    19001,178,150+14.4%
    19202,154,835+82.9%
    19402,688,240+24.8%
    19503,395,766+26.3%
    19604,138,289+21.9%
    19705,253,901+27.0%
    19806,244,275+18.9%
    19917,122,548+14.1%
    20007,929,154+11.3%
    20108,796,448+10.9%
    20229,058,931+3.0%
    Source:[1]

    Education[edit]

    School of Law at the Federal University of Pernambuco.

    Portuguese is the official national language, and thus the primary language taught in schools. But English and Spanish are part of the official high school curriculum.

    Higher education[edit]

    Local health care training by the Olinda local administration

    Pernambuco is served by many higher education institutions, concentrated in Recife. Most universities and colleges were founded in the 19th and 20th century, and some are known nationally.

    The oldest is the Faculdade de Direito do Recife (lit.'College of Law of Recife'), founded on 11 August 1827 in the then-state capital of Olinda, one of the first higher education institutes in Brazil. Castro Alves and Joaquim Nabuco, two important Brazilian historical figures are among its alumni.

    Many institutions are composed of several autonomous campuses serving the entire state, however Recife remains undeniably the center of education.

    Important institutions include:

    Headquartered in Recife:

    Located elsewhere in the state:

    Economy[edit]

    The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 73.2%, followed by the industrial sector at 21.6%. Agribusiness represents 5.2% of GDP (2006). Pernambuco exports: sugar 35.6%, fruit and juice 12.6%, fish and crustacean 12.3%, electric products 11.1%, chemicals 7.1%, woven 5.6% (2002).

    Economic Sectorial Composition in 2006 (BR$)[41]
    Primary sector % Secondary sector % Tertiary sector % Taxation GDP growth GDP PC R$ growth
    2.474 5.2% 10.316 21.6% 34.872 73.2% 7.843 55.505 (100%) 5.1% 6.528 10%
    Economic regions

    According with IBGE, in 2007 Pernambuco has 2.34% share of the Brazilian economy and 17.9% share of the Northeast region economy. It's the 10th largest economy of the whole country. The GDP for the state was R$104,394,000,000 (2011), and the per capita income was R$11,776.

    Atlântico Sul Shipyard, the biggest shipyard in the Southern Hemisphere, located in Industrial Port Complex of Suape.[42]

    The economy is based on agriculture (sugarcane, manioc), livestock farming and creations, as well as industry (shipbuilding, automotive, chemical, metallurgical, electronic, textile, alimentary). In the period of October 2005 to October 2006, the industrial growth of the state was the second biggest in Brazil – 6.3%, more than double the national average in the same period (2.3%). Another segment that deserves to be highlighted is mineral extraction. The pole gesseiro of Araripina is the supplier from 95% of the plaster consumed in Brazil. The pole of data processing of the Recife, Digital Port, despite having started in 2000, is one of the five biggest in Brazil. It employs around three thousand persons, and has 3.5% the GDP of the state.

    Livestock[edit]

    According with IBGE 2007, Pernambuco has the 2nd largest livestock portfolio in the Northeast region and the 8th of Brazil.

    Livestock Table 2007[43]
    Animal or product N. of heads NE Ranking & % BR Ranking & %
    Goats 1595069 2nd – 18.48% 2nd – 16.88%
    Sheep 1256270 4th – 13.53% 5th – 7.74%
    Cattle 2219892 4th – 7.74% 16th – 1.11%
    cow milk 662078000 liters 2nd – 19.86% 9th – 2.54%
    Pigs 495957 5th – 7.35% 14th – 1.38%
    Chickens 31916818 1st – 24.24% 7th – 2.83%
    Chickens eggs 142518000 dozens 1st – 30.56% 6th – 4.81%
    Quail 605371 1st – 43.24% 4th – 7.98%
    Quails eggs 9390000 dozens 1st – 51.43% 4th – 7.17%
    Horses 125976 5th – 8.81% 15th −2.25%
    Donkeys 100944 5th – 9.50% 5th – 8.68%
    Mules 54812 4th – 7.97% 7th – 4.08%
    Buffalos 19239 2nd – 16.04% 11th – 1.70%
    Rabbits 2383 2nd – 6.45% 9th – 0.82%
    Honey 1177000 kg 4th – 10.15% 9th – 3.39%

    Agriculture[edit]

    Petrolina. The largest Brazilian producer of grapes, mangoes, and guavas, also known for goat and sheep ranching
    Agriculture Table of Pernambuco in 2002[44]
    Product S Quantity T NE Ranking & % BR Ranking & %
    Tomatoes 207736 2nd – 35.7% 5th – 5.69%
    Manioc 483634 4th – 5.91% 13th – 2.1%
    Water melons 62820 2nd – 15.61% 7th – 4.22%
    Melons 16686 4th – 5.00% 4th – 4.74%
    Sugarcane 17626183 2nd – 29.51% 5th – 4.84%
    Onions 89082 2nd – 39.78% 5th – 7.29%
    Beans 82245 3rd – 9.50% 9th – 2.69%
    Rice 17865 7th – 1.93% 21st – 0.17%
    Sweet potatoes 25727 3rd – 16.23% 7th – 5.17%
    Pineapples 24028 5th – 10.2% 12th – 1.11%
    Fava 569 3rd – 6.0% 4th – 5.63%
    corn 86675 5th – 3.93% 18th – 0.24%
    Castor beans 319 3rd – 0.20% 8th – 0.19%
    Cotton 1877 8th – 0.32% 15th – 0.13
    Product P Quantity T NE Ranking & % BR Ranking & %
    Grapes 99978 1st – 53.6% 3rd – 8.70%
    Guavas 104771 1st – 74.41% 2nd – 32.63%
    Mangoes 136488 2nd – 24.74% 3rd – 16.20%
    Coconuts 152266+ 3rd – 10.89% 5th – 7.90%
    lemons 2965 4th – 4.20% 12th – 0.30%
    Passion fruits 5611 6th – 2.71% 14th – 1.17%
    Tangerines 5264 4th – 14.34% 11th – 0.42%
    Papayas 5358 6th – 0.57% 12th – 0.34%
    Cashew nuts 3554 4th – 2.20% 4th – 2.10%
    Bananas 367481 2nd – 16.69% 6th – 5.72%
    Oranges 5638 8th – 0.34% 22nd – 0.03%
    Avocados 1685 2nd – 15.49% 11th – 1.0%
    Rubber 706 3rd – 3.59% 12th – 0.48%
    Cotton tree 222 4th – 5.41% 4th – 5.41%

    S – Seasonal; P – Permanent agriculture; + – Thousands units

    Ethanol[edit]

    Pernambuco was once the 5th largest producer of sugarcane in Brazil, but today it ranks 8th, behind São Paulo, Goiás, Minas Gerais, Mato Grosso do Sul, Paraná, Mato Grosso and Alagoas.[45] Brazil is the second largest producer of alcohol fuel in the world, typically fermenting ethanol from sugarcane and sugar beets. The country produces a total of 18 billion liters annually, of which 3.5 billion are exported, 2 billion of them to the US. Alcohol-fueled cars started in the Brazilian market in 1978 and became quite popular because of heavy subsidy, but in the 80s prices rose and gasoline regained the leading market share. But from 2004 on, alcohol rapidly increased its market share once again because of new technologies involving hybrid fuel car engines called "Flex" by all major car manufacturers (Volkswagen, General Motors, Ford, Peugeot, Honda, Citroën, Fiat, etc.). "Flex" engines work with gasoline, alcohol or any mixture of both fuels. As of February 2007, approximately 80% of new vehicles sold in Brazil are hybrid fuel powered. Because of the Brazilian lead in production and technology, many countries became very interested in importing alcohol fuel and adopting the "Flex" vehicle concept.

    Industry[edit]

    In 2018, Pernambuco had an industrial GDP of R$32.4 billion, equivalent to 2.5% of the national industry and employing more than 280,000 workers in the industry. The main industrial sectors are: Construction (20%), Public Utilities Industrial Services, such as Electricity and Water (17%), Food (14.9%), Petroleum derivatives and biofuels (9.3%) and Motor vehicles (8.8%). These 5 sectors concentrate 70% of the state's industry. In only 3 places in the Brazilian Northeast Region, there is some relevant industrial production, one of them being the surroundings of Recife. However, the state continues to have little participation in the Brazilian economy, with the population largely concentrated on the coast.[46]

    Infrastructure[edit]

    Airports[edit]

    Guararapes International Airport, in Recife

    Recife/Guararapes–Gilberto Freyre International Airport has been open since July 2004 and has 52 thousand square meters of area. The largest airport in the North and Northeast regions, Guararapes had its capacity expanded from 5 million to 11 million passengers a year. Now there are 64 check-in counters, versus the former terminal's 24. The shopping and leisure area was also totally remodeled, within the "Aeroshopping" concept, which transforms an airport into a center for business and retail. The commercial spaces will be occupied in steps and the final total will be 142 shops. Since 2000, Recife has had the longest runway in the Northeast, at 3,305 meters. Its extension permits operations with jumbo jets, such as the Boeing 747-400, able to fly nonstop to anywhere in South and Central America, Africa and parts of Europe, the United States and Canada.

    Pernambuco is also served by the Petrolina International Airport, which is responsible for the delivery of fresh fruit from the São Francisco valley to Europe and the US. The cargo terminal operates with 6 large coolers[47] with 17000 boxes capacity each plus 2 coolers tunnels. This airports also has daily direct connections between this region (which includes 53 municipalities from the states such as Pernambuco, Piaui and Bahia) to major capitals as Recife and Salvador. Like the Recife airport, it is administered by the Brazilian Federal Agency (Infraero).

    Other locally administered airports within the state are the Fernando de Noronha Airport and the Caruaru airports. Fernando de Noronhha has daily flights between the islands with Recife and Natal, and the second airport connects the textile industry region of Caruaru with São Paulo and local cities.

    Ports[edit]

    Recife Port

    Suape has started in the 21st century to be Pernambuco's motive power toward development. Huge national and international investments are being attracted by its logistic qualities, of which, until 2010, more than US$10 billion are expected.

    There are two access channels to the Port, both of natural characteristics. The main one, South Channel, has 260 m of width and 3.4 km (2.1 mi) of extension approximately, with a depth of 10.5 m. The other, denominated North Channel, has little width, about 1.00 km (0.62 mi) of length, and a depth of 6.5 m, and it is used only by small size vessels. Handles an average of 2.2 million tons[50] of cargo annually, and the main loads are sugar, wheat, corn, barley, malt, fertilizers, clinker and kelp.

    Railways[edit]

    Freight trains are operated by Transnordestina Logística [pt], formerly the Companhia Ferroviária do Nordeste (CFN), and mainly hauls iron ore, petroleum, and cement. The company won a 30-year concession following the privatization of the RFFSA in 1997, and also serves neighboring states of Ceará and Piauí.[51] The network is built to metre gauge, and is 1,753 kilometres (1,089 mi) long.[52]

    The Recife Metro, opened in 1985, has five lines and is operated by the federally-controlled Compania Brasileira de Trens Urbanos (CBTU).

    Roads[edit]

    Festivals[edit]

    Carnival[edit]

    Carnival in Recife

    The four-day period before Lent leading up to Ash Wednesdayiscarnival time in Brazil. Rich and poor alike forget their cares as they party in the streets. Pernambuco has large Carnaval celebrations, including the frevo, typical Pernambuco music. Another carnaval music style from Pernambuco is maracatu.

    The cities of Recife and Olinda hold the most authentic and democratic carnaval celebrations in Brazil. The largest carnaval parade in all of Brazil is Galo da Madrugada, which takes place in downtown Recife in the Saturday of carnaval. Another event is the Noite dos Tambores Silenciosos.

    Recife's joyous Carnaval is nationally known, attracting thousands of people every year. The party starts a week before the official date, with electric trios "shaking" the Boa Viagem district.

    On Friday, people take to the streets to enjoy themselves to the sound of frevo and to dance with maracatu, ciranda, caboclinhos, afoxé, reggae and manguebeat (cultural movement created in Recife during the 1990s) groups. There are still many other entertainment centres around the city, featuring local and national artists.

    Giant Dolls - Olinda Carnival

    One of the highlights is Saturday when more than one million people follow the Galo da Madrugada group. From Sunday to Monday, there is the Night of the Silent Drums, on the Pátio do Terço, where Maracatus honor slaves that died in prisons.

    Saint John's Day[edit]

    Festa Junina was introduced to Northeastern Brazil by the Portuguese, for whom Saint John's day (also celebrated as Midsummer Day in several European countries), on 24 June, is one of the oldest and most popular celebrations of the year. Differently, of course, from what happens on the European Midsummer Day, the festivities in Brazil do not take place during the summer solstice, but during the tropical winter solstice. The festivities traditionally begin after 12 June, on the eve of Saint Anthony's day, and last until the 29th, which is Saint Peter's day. During these fifteen days, there are bonfires, fireworks, and folk dancing in the streets. Once exclusively a rural festival, today, in Brazil, it is largely a city festival during which people joyfully and theatrically mimic peasant stereotypes and clichés in a spirit of jokes and good times. Typical refreshments and dishes are served, including canjica and pamonha. Like during Carnival, these festivities involve costume-wearing (in this case, peasant costumes), dancing, heavy drinking, and visual spectacles (fireworks display and folk dancing). Like what happens on Midsummer and Saint John's Day in Europe, bonfires are a central part of these festivities in Brazil.

    Saint John's Day is celebrated throughout Pernambuco. Nonetheless, the festivities in Caruaru are by far the largest in the state. Saint John's festivals in Gravatá and Carpina are also popular.[citation needed]

    Winter Festival[edit]

    In the hilly areas of the interior – mainly in areas with a micro-climate of altitude – temperatures that can reach 8 °C in the winter. Every winter, when the weather is milder, tourists from neighboring states and other parts of Pernambuco visit cities such as Garanhuns, Gravatá, Triunfo, Taquaritinga do Norte and Brejo da Madre de Deus.

    The city of Garanhuns holds an annual Winter Festival, in the month of July. The main attractions are concerts, dances, rural tourism, culinary and the relatively low temperatures for a tropical climate.

    Tourism and recreation[edit]

    Praia Sancho, beyond this beach, a reserve for some 600 spinner dolphins is established in Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, Pernambuco.
    Petrolina Cathedral

    The Pernambuco coastline is 187 km long. There are about 187 kilometers (116 mi) of beaches, including at Porto de Galinhas, Carneiros and Calhetas.

    City of Tamandaré, in the coast of Pernambuco
    The neighborhood of Boa Viagem, in Recife
    Mascarenhas de Morais Avenue, Recife
    City of Triunfo, mountainous (serrano) tourism
    City of Garanhuns

    Main cities[edit]

    List of the 25 largest cities in Pernambuco as of 2022[53]
    Ranking City Population (2022) GDP (in thousands of Brazilian Reals (R$)) (2007).[54] GDP per capita (R$) (2021)
    1 Recife 1,488,920 20,718,107 33.094,37
    2 J. dos Guararapes 643,759 5,578,363 22,680
    6 Petrolina 386,786 1,932,517 22,244
    4 Caruaru 378,052 1,367,111 23,456
    3 Olinda 349,976 2,179,183 14,700
    5 Paulista 342,167 1,993,295 16,596
    7 Cabo de St. Agostinho 203,216 2,813,188 65,022
    8 Camaragibe 147,771 492,113 13,940
    10 Garanhuns 142,506 745,504 21,769
    9 Vitória de St. Antão 134,110 742,593 32,423
    12 Igarassu 115,196 310,748 29,003
    11 S. Lourenço da Mata 111,243 734,430 12,568
    15 Ipojuca 98,932 434,704 150,647
    13 Abreu e Lima 98,462 567,474 17,123
    14 St. Cruz do Capibaribe 98,254 332,112 17,222
    16 Serra Talhada 92,228 255,578 19,359
    18 Gravatá 86,516 306,637 15,938
    17 Araripina 85,088 5,354,635 14,912
    19 Goiana 81,042 457,986 132,714
    21 Belo Jardim 79,507 351,448 35,942
    20 Carpina 79,293 504,735 20,496
    22 Arcoverde 77,742 290,529 16,141
    23 Ouricuri 65,245 200,880 11,076
    24 Pesqueira 62,722 236,259 12,776
    25 Escada 59,891 233,562 18,743
    RMR Recife metropolitan area 3,688,428 40,872,963 10,845
    State PERNAMBUCO 9,058,931 62,255,687 7,337

    Sports[edit]

    Arena Pernambuco

    Football was introduced to Pernambuco in 1902, when English and Dutch sailors disembarked in Recife and played a game of football in the beach. The novelty awoke the interest of the people of Pernambuco, that soon adhered to the game. Recife provides visitors and residents with various sport activities; the city has the largest football teams of the state of Pernambuco. There are several football clubs based in Recife, such as Sport, Santa Cruz, and Náutico.

    According to the Brazilian Football Confederation in 2008, the Pernambuco Football Federation was ranked sixth nationwide, behind São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Rio Grande do Sul, Minas Gerais and Paraná; and first in the Northeast region.[55] The Pernambuco Football Federation organizes the Campeonato Pernambucano state championship and the state cup. The first edition of the Campeonato Pernambucano was played in 1915, and was won by Sport Club Flamengo, a club since defunct. In 2011 twelve clubs competed, which was won by Santa Cruz.

    In 2012 the state was represented in the highest national level of football (Brazilian Série A) by Náutico and Sport. Also, it was represented in (Série C) by Santa Cruz and Salgueiro and in (Série D) by Central.

    Recife was one of the 12 Brazilian cities that hosted the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

    Gallery[edit]

    A Pernambuco landscape by an unknown naïve artist

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "2022 Census Overview" (in Portuguese).
  • ^ "PIB por Unidade da Federação, 2021". ibge.gov.br.
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  • ^ C. R. Boxer, The Golden Age of Brazil: 1695-1750, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1962
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  • ^ Kit Sims Taylor, Sugar and Underdevelopment of Northeastern Brazil 1500-1970, University Presses of Florida, p. 5
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  • ^ E. Bradford Burns, A History of Brazil, 3 ed. Columbia University Press, New York, p. 444
  • ^ Szwarcwald, C.L., Almeida, W.d., Teixeira, R.A. et al. "Inequalities in infant mortality in Brazil at subnational levels in Brazil, 1990 to 2015." Popul Health Metrics 18, 4 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12963-020-00208-1
  • ^ D. Pereira, C.Mota, and M. Andresen, "The Homicide Drop in Recife, Brazil: A Study of Crime Concentrations and Spatial Patterns", Homicide Studies 2017, Vol. 21(1) 21&27.
  • ^ Funari, Pedro Paulo Pereira (2017), Bértola, Luis; Williamson, Jeffrey (eds.), "Inequality, Institutions, and Long-Term Development: A Perspective from Brazilian Regions", Has Latin American Inequality Changed Direction? Looking Over the Long Run, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 113–142, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-44621-9_6, ISBN 978-3-319-44621-9, S2CID 157455763, retrieved 11 April 2021
  • ^ "Fernando de Noronha". www.noronha.pe.gov.br. Archived from the original on 12 April 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  • ^ Source: PNAD.
  • ^ a b «Censo 2010». IBGE
  • ^ a b «Análise dos Resultados/IBGE Censo Demográfico 2010: Características gerais da população, religião e pessoas com deficiência» (PDF)
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