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Publication Date

3-2-2009

Description

10) Sugarcane plantation house (casa grande) on the northern outskirts of Rio de Janeiro near the Baixada Fluminense plain area. The Portuguese and French first exploited a dyewood named pau Brasil (Brazil wood), yet sugarcane soon became the mainstay of the local economy. African slaves were imported to substitute insufficient Indian labor.10) A Casa grande em estilo colonial em uma fazenda de cana na Baixada Fluminense, nos arredores do Rio de Janeiro (ao norte). Os portugueses e franceses exploraram em primeiro lugar o pau-Brasil, mas logo a cana-de-açúcar tornou-se o suporte da economia local. Escravos africanos foram trazidos para substituir a insuficiente mão-de-obra indígena.

Publisher

Latin American and Iberian Institute / University of New Mexico

Rights

Brazil Slide Series Collection: This article is copyrighted by the Latin American & Iberian Institute (LAII) of the University of New Mexico. Rights permission is for standard academic, non-commercial, use of these materials. Proper citation of this material should include title, author, publisher, date, and URL. Copyright Latin American and Iberian Institute University of New Mexico 1991

Keywords

Brazil: Rio de Janeiro

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