On the morning of 7 September 1822 C.E., a young prince regent stood beside a brook on the outskirts of São Paulo and made a declaration that would reshape South America forever. Pedro of Braganza, surrounded by his imperial guard, tore the Portuguese insignia from his uniform and cried out what history would remember as the Grito do Ipiranga — the Cry of Ipiranga: “Independence or death.” In that moment, the largest country in South America was born.
What the evidence shows
- Brazil independence declaration: Prince regent Pedro formally proclaimed Brazil’s separation from Portugal on 7 September 1822 C.E., beside the Ipiranga brook near São Paulo — the event became known as the Cry of Ipiranga.
- Cry of Ipiranga: Pedro was acclaimed Emperor of Brazil on 12 October 1822 C.E. and formally crowned on 1 December 1822 C.E., establishing the Empire of Brazil as a constitutional monarchy.
- Treaty of Rio de Janeiro: Portugal formally recognized Brazilian sovereignty in 1825 C.E., following four years of military conflict and diplomatic negotiation, sealing independence through an international agreement.
How a colonial kingdom became a nation
The road to independence began not in Brazil but in Europe. In 1807 C.E., Napoleon’s army invaded Portugal, and the entire Portuguese royal court — thousands of courtiers, officials, and soldiers — boarded ships and sailed across the Atlantic with the help of the British Royal Navy. They settled in Rio de Janeiro, transforming a colonial city into the de facto capital of the Portuguese Empire.
That transplant changed everything. Within Brazil, the royal court built institutions, opened ports to international trade, and lifted decades of colonial restrictions. For the first time, Brazilians could trade freely with other nations. The colony began to feel, and function, like a country.
In 1815 C.E., King John VI formalized this shift by elevating Brazil to kingdom status, creating the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves — a striking constitutional arrangement that placed Brazil on equal legal footing with its former ruler. But the balance was fragile. When a liberal revolution broke out in Portugal in 1820 C.E., the Cortes demanded John return to Lisbon and sought to strip Brazil of its kingdom status, reducing it once again to a colony.
John left his son Pedro behind as prince regent. The Portuguese Cortes then demanded Pedro return to Europe as well — demoting him from prince regent to a mere military commander with no political authority. Pedro refused. In January 1822 C.E., in a moment known as Fico — “I am staying” — he publicly defied the order. By September, he had made that defiance permanent.
A war fought on many fronts
Independence was not declared into a vacuum. A war of independence had already begun in 1821 C.E. when Portuguese troops were expelled from Pernambuco. The newly forming Brazilian Army recruited mercenaries, enlisted civilians, and absorbed Portuguese colonial troops to oppose Portuguese forces still controlling significant territory — including provinces in what is now Uruguay, as well as Bahia, Piauí, Maranhão, and Grão-Pará.
The conflict was not only between Brazil and Portugal. A revolutionary movement in Pernambuco and neighboring provinces sought to break away from the Brazilian independence movement entirely, forming a republic called the Confederation of the Equator. The movement was suppressed — harshly — by the imperial government.
That episode is a reminder that “independence” meant different things to different people. For many Brazilians, especially in the northeast, the transition from Portuguese colony to Brazilian empire was not liberation — it was simply a change in who held authority.
Lasting impact
Brazil’s independence set a precedent for peaceful political transition on a continental scale — though the peace was never complete. The country became the only monarchy in the Americas to survive into the 19th century with lasting stability, and its sheer size meant that the new nation immediately became one of the most significant political entities in the Western Hemisphere.
The institutional groundwork laid during the years of the royal court in Rio de Janeiro — courts, ministries, a national bank, free trade — gave Brazil an unusual head start compared to other newly independent Latin American nations. Where many of its neighbors fractured into smaller republics, Brazil held together as a single, vast state.
The Treaty of Rio de Janeiro in 1825 C.E. formalized recognition from Portugal, but on costly terms: Brazil agreed to compensate Portugal financially and to sign treaties with the United Kingdom committing to ban the Atlantic slave trade and grant preferential tariffs to British goods. The slave trade ban, notably, was poorly enforced for decades. Millions of enslaved Africans had already been brought to Brazil — more than to any other destination in the Americas — and the institution of slavery itself was not abolished until 1888 C.E.
Brazil’s independence also had long-term consequences for Latin American geopolitics. The preservation of a single large state in South America shaped the balance of power across the continent for the next two centuries. The historical relationship between Brazil and Portugal — economic, linguistic, cultural — remained complex and deeply intertwined long after sovereignty was secured.
Today, 7 September is celebrated across Brazil as Dia da Independência, a national holiday marked by military parades and civic ceremonies. The Cry of Ipiranga has become one of the most iconic moments in Latin American history.
Blindspots and limits
Brazil’s independence was largely an affair of the elite — the Portuguese-born and Brazilian-born ruling classes, not the enslaved African majority or the Indigenous peoples whose lands had been occupied for three centuries. The empire that emerged preserved slavery as a legal institution and continued the displacement of Indigenous communities. For much of the population, the change in political status brought little immediate change in lived conditions. The Confederation of the Equator’s suppression also showed that the new empire was willing to use force to prevent more radical or republican visions of independence from taking hold.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Independence of Brazil
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares recognized ahead of COP30
- Ghana establishes marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Brazil
About this article
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