Events in the year 1920 in Brazil.
Incumbents
editFederal government
edit- President: Epitácio Pessoa
- Vice President: Delfim Moreira (until 1 July); vacant (1 July to 10 November); Francisco Álvaro Bueno de Paiva (from 10 November)
Governors
edit- Alagoas: José Fernandes de Barros Lima
- Amazonas: Pedro de Alcântara Bacelar
- Bahia: Antônio Ferrão Muniz de Aragão, then José Joaquim Seabra
- Ceará:
- till 12 July: João Tomé de Sabóia e Silva
- from 12 12 July: Justiniano de Serpa
- Goiás: João Alves de Castro
- Maranhão: Urbano Santos
- Mato Grosso: Francisco de Aquino Correia
- Minas Gerais: Artur Bernardes
- Pará: Lauro Sodré
- Paraíba:
- till 22 October: Francisco Camilo de Holanda
- from 22 October: Sólon Barbosa de Lucena
- Paraná:
- Pernambuco:
- till 28 October: José Rufino Bezerra Cavalcanti
- from 28 October: Otávio Hamilton Tavares Barreto
- Piauí:
- till 1 July: Eurípedes Clementino de Aguiar
- from 1 July: João Luís Ferreira
- Rio Grande do Norte: Joaquim Ferreira Chaves
- Rio Grande do Sul: Antônio Augusto Borges de Medeiros
- Santa Catarina:
- São Paulo:
- Sergipe:
Vice governors
editEvents
edit- 20 April - Opening ceremony of the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp, at which Brazil competes for the first time.[1] Sport shooter Guilherme Paraense is the first Brazilian to win a gold medal.
Arts and culture
editBooks
edit- Monteiro Lobato[2] writes the first of his Sítio do Picapau Amarelo novel series.
Films
edit- Coração de Gaúcho, directed by and starring Luiz de Barros
- O Crime de Cravinhos, directed by Arturo Carrari and starring Rodolfo Arena.
- O Garimpeiro, directed by and starring Vittorio Capellaro
Births
edit- 9 January - João Cabral de Melo Neto, poet and diplomat (died 1999)[3]
- 21 April - Anselmo Duarte, actor, screenwriter and film director (died 2009)[4]
- 26 July - Celso Furtado (died 2004)
Deaths
edit- 26 March - Prince Luís, claimant to the Brazilian throne (born 1878; rheumatism)[5]
- 1 July - Delfim Moreira, politician (born 1868)
- 16 October - Alberto Nepomuceno, conductor and composer (born 1864)[6]
References
edit- ^ Official Olympic Reports Archived 2006-06-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Monteiro Lobato - E-Biografias
- ^ Academia Brasileira de Letras profile of João Cabral de Melo Neto
- ^ "Anselmo Duarte morre em SP aos 89 anos". Folha de S.Paulo (in Portuguese). November 7, 2009. Archived from the original on December 24, 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-07.
- ^ Barman, Roderick J. (2002). Princess Isabel of Brazil: gender and power in the nineteenth century. Wilmington, Delaware: Scholarly Resources. ISBN 0-8420-2846-3. BR História. nº 4, Year 1. Duetto, 2007. p 232
- ^ Guimarães, Maria Inês (1994). "Nepomuceno Biography, and Program Notes to Marco Polo Recording of Piano Works". Naxos Records. Retrieved 2007-11-28.
See also
editWikimedia Commons has media related to 1920 in Brazil.