axo melhores mesmo deram sola para brasil junto rei uns anos antes,
deixaram retangulo para familias de funcionarios publicos, portugal ainda estava recuprar da politica terra queimada dos tempos napoliao
o Brasil não parecia digno de se tornar a sede da monarquia portuguesa. Era preciso mudar o estado das coisas, e rápido. Afinal, o príncipe regente tinha chegado para ficar, não tinha a menor idéia de quando poderia voltar à Europa. Suas prioridades ao pisar na colônia só poderiam ser as óbvias: criar condições de vida para a corte e mecanismos que permitissem governar todo o império a partir de sua nova capital, o Rio de Janeiro.
A simples presença da corte portuguesa no Rio de Janeiro já promovia o desenvolvimento do Brasil. Mas abriram-se estradas, surgiram fábricas, criou-se um banco...
For thirteen years, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, functioned as the capital of the Kingdom of Portugal in what some historians call a metropolitan reversal (i.e., a colony exercising governance over the entirety of an empire). The period in which the court was located in Rio brought significant changes to the city and its residents, and can be interpreted through several perspectives. It had profound impacts on Brazilian society, economics, infrastructure, and politics. The transfer of the king and the royal court "represented the first step toward Brazilian independence, since the king immediately opened the ports of Brazil to foreign shipping and turned the colonial capital into the seat of government.
On December 16, 1815, John created the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves (Reino Unido de Portugal, Brasil e Algarves), elevating Brazil to the same rank as Portugal and increasing the administrative independence of Brazil.
The relocation of the Portuguese nobility and administrative core to Brazil in 1808 had tremendous ramifications and resulted in a multi-faceted approach to change. Brazilian politics were initiated and affected, society and demographics were altered, the economy developed, and the city of Rio de Janeiro physically changed. The impact was felt in different ways and degrees by different sections of the population: nobility, wealthy families, Brazilians, indigenous peoples, and enslaved Africans or Afro-Brazilians. The stability and prosperity of the Brazilian state, resulting from the royal court's presence, allowed for it to declare independence from Portugal without the violence and destabilization characteristic of similar movements in neighboring countries