1990 in Brazil
Events in the year 1990 in Brazil.
1990 in Brazil |
---|
Flag |
![]() 23 stars (1968–92) |
Timeline of Brazilian history |
History of Brazil since 1985 |
Year of Constitution: 1988 |
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: José Sarney (until March 14), Fernando Collor de Mello (starting March 15)
- Vice President: Vacant (until March 14), Itamar Franco (starting March 15)
Governors
- Acre: Édison Simão Cadaxo
- Alagoas: Moacir Andrade
- Amazonas: Amazonino Mendes (until April 2); Vivaldo Barroso Frota (from April 2)[1]
- Bahia: Nilo Moraes Coelho
- Ceará: Tasso Jereissati[2]
- Espírito Santo: Max Freitas Mauro
- Goiás: Henrique Santillo
- Maranhão: Epitácio Cafeteira (until April 3); João Alberto de Souza (from April 3)[3]
- Mato Grosso: Edison de Oliveira
- Mato Grosso do Sul: Marcelo Miranda Soares
- Minas Gerais: Newton Cardoso[4]
- Pará: Hélio Gueiros
- Paraíba: Tarcísio Burity
- Paraná: Alvaro Dias
- Pernambuco: Joaquim Francisco Cavalcanti
- Piauí: Alberto Silva
- Rio de Janeiro: Moreira Franco
- Rio Grande do Norte: Geraldo José Ferreira de Melo
- Rio Grande do Sul: Pedro Simon (until 2 April); Sinval Sebastião Duarte Guazzelli (from 2 April)
- Rondônia: Jerônimo Garcia de Santana
- Roraima: Rubens Vilar
- Santa Catarina: Pedro Ivo Campos (until 27 February); Casildo Maldaner (from 27 February)
- São Paulo: Orestes Quércia
- Sergipe: Antônio Carlos Valadares
- Tocantins: José Wilson Siqueira Campos
Vice governors
- Acre: Edison Simão Cadaxo (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Alagoas: vacant
- Amazonas: Vivaldo Barros Frota (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Bahia: vacant
- Ceará: Francisco Castelo de Castro
- Espírito Santo: Carlos Alberto Batista da Cunha
- Goiás: Joaquim Domingos Roriz
- Maranhão: João Alberto Souza (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Mato Grosso: Edison Freitas de Oliveira (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Mato Grosso do Sul: George Takimoto
- Minas Gerais: Júnia Marise de Azeredo Coutinho
- Pará: Hermínio Calvinho Filho
- Paraíba: vacant
- Paraná: Ary Veloso Queiroz
- Pernambuco: Carlos Wilson Rocha de Queirós Campos (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Piauí: Lucídio Portela Nunes
- Rio de Janeiro: Francisco Amaral
- Rio Grande do Norte: Garibaldi Alves
- Rio Grande do Sul: Sinval Sebastião Duarte Guazzelli (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Rondônia: Orestes Muniz Filho
- Santa Catarina: Casildo João Maldaner (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- São Paulo: Almino Afonso (until 2 April); vacant thereafter (from 2 April)
- Sergipe: Benedito de Figueiredo
- Tocantins: Darci Martins Coelho
Births
- July 3 – Lucas Mendes, footballer
Deaths
- May 7 – Elizete Cardoso, singer and actress, 69
- July 7 – Cazuza, singer and songwriter, 32 (AIDS)[5]
References
- "Morre Vivaldo Frota, ex-governador do Amazonas". D24am. January 16, 2016. Archived from the original on February 3, 2015. Retrieved February 15, 2015.
- Policymaking in a Redemocratized Brazil: A Report by the Policy Research Project on Public Policies in Brazil, The University of Texas at Austin. Decentralization and social policy. Board of Regents, University of Texas. 1997. p. 454. ISBN 978-0-89940-727-2.
- Veja. Abril. 2001. p. 43.
- Valéria Bretas (4 April 2016). "Quem são os 26 brasileiros citados por ora no Panama Papers". Exame. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
- Aldrich, Robert; Garry Wotherspoon (2001). Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II. Routledge. p. 79. ISBN 0-415-22974-X. Retrieved 2007-09-29.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1990 in Brazil.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.