Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Ipiranga Brook

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Native name
  
Riacho do Ipiranga

Source
  
São Paulo

Country
  
Brazil

Length
  
9 km

Mouth
  
Tamanduateí River

Ipiranga Brook httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Region
  
São Paulo city, São Paulo state

Main source
  
São Paulo Botanical Garden, São Paulo city

River mouth
  
Tamanduateí River, São Paulo city

Similar
  
Monument to the Independ, Museu Paulista, Parque da Independência, Casa do Grito, Botanical Garden of São Paulo

The Ipiranga Brook (in Portuguese: Riacho do Ipiranga) is a river of São Paulo state in southeastern Brazil, historically known as the place where Dom Pedro I declared the independence of Brazil from the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves.

Contents

Map of Riacho do Ipiranga, S%C3%A3o Paulo - State of S%C3%A3o Paulo, Brazil

Its name derives from the Tupi words: "Y", which means water or river, and "Piranga", which means red. It is also mentioned in the country's national anthem.

Declaration of Independence

On September 2, 1822, a decree with Lisbon's demands arrived in Rio de Janeiro, while Prince Pedro was in São Paulo. Princess Maria Leopoldina, acting as Princess Regent, met with the Council of Ministers and decided to send her husband a letter advising him to proclaim Brazil's independence. The letter reached Prince Pedro on September 7, 1822. That same day, in a famous scene at the shore of the Ipiranga Brook, he declared the country's independence, ending 322 years of colonial dominance of Portugal over Brazil. According to journalist Laurentino Gomes, who wrote a book about the event, 1822, Prince Pedro "could not wait for his arrival to São Paulo to announce the decision"; Pedro "was a reckless man in his decisions but he had the profile of leader that Brazil needed at the time, because there was no time to think".

References

Ipiranga Brook Wikipedia