| 1975 in Brazil | 
|---|
| Flag | 
![]() 23 stars (1968–92)  | 
| Timeline of Brazilian history | 
| Brazilian military government | 
| Year of Constitution: 1967 | 
Events in the year 1975 in Brazil.
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: General Ernesto Geisel
 - Vice President: General Adalberto Pereira dos Santos
 
Governors
- Acre: Vacant
 - Alagoas: 
- Afrânio Lages (until 15 March)
 - Divaldo Suruagy (from 15 March)
 
 - Amazonas: 
- João Walter de Andrade (until 15 March)
 - Henoch da Silva Reis (from 15 March)
 
 - Bahia: 
- Antônio Carlos Magalhães (until 15 March)
 - Roberto Santos (from 15 March)
 
 - Ceará: 
- César Cals (until 15 March)
 - José Adauto Bezerra (from 15 March)
 
 - Espírito Santo: 
- Artur Carlos Gerhardt Santos (until 15 March)
 - Élcio Álvares (from 15 March)
 
 - Goiás: 
- Leonino Caiado (until 15 March)
 - Irapuan Costa Jr. (from 15 March)
 
 - Guanabara: Antonio de Pádua Chagas Freitas (until 15 March)
 - Maranhão: 
- Pedro Neiva de Santana (until 15 March)
 - Oswaldo da Costa Nunes Freire (from 31 March)
 
 - Mato Grosso: 
- José Fragelli (until 15 March)
 - Jose Garcia Neto (from 15 March)
 
 - Minas Gerais: 
- Rondon Pacheco (until 15 March)
 - Aureliano Chaves (from 15 March)
 
 - Pará: 
- Fernando Guilhon (until 15 March)
 - Aloysio Chaves (from 15 March)
 
 - Paraíba: 
- Ernâni Sátiro (until 15 March)
 - Ivan Bichara (from 15 March)
 
 - Paraná: 
- Emílio Hoffmann Gomes (until 15 March)
 - Jaime Canet Júnior (from 15 March)
 
 - Pernambuco: 
- Eraldo Gueiros (until 15 March)
 - Francisco Moura Cavalcanti (from 15 March)
 
 - Piauí: 
- Alberto Silva (until 15 March)
 - Dirceu Arcoverde (from 15 March)
 
 - Rio de Janeiro: Floriano P. Faria Lima
 - Rio Grande do Norte: 
- Jose Pereira de Araújo Cortez (until 15 March)
 - Tarcisio de Vasconcelos Maia (from 15 March)
 
 - Rio Grande do Sul: 
- Euclides Triches (until 15 March)
 - Sinval Sebastião Duarte Guazzelli (from 15 March)
 
 - Santa Catarina: 
- Colombo Salles (until 15 March)
 - Antônio Carlos Konder Reis (from 15 March)
 
 - São Paulo: 
- Laudo Natel (until 15 March)
 - Paulo Egídio Martins (from 15 March)
 
 - Sergipe: 
- Paulo Barreto de Menezes (until 15 March)
 - José Rollemberg (from 15 March)
 
 
Vice governors
- Acre: 
- Alberto Barbosa da Costa (until 15 March)
 - Omar Sabino de Paula (from 15 March)
 
 - Alagoas: 
- José de Medeiros Tavares (until 15 March)
 - Antônio Gomes de Barro (from 15 March)
 
 - Amazonas: 
- Deoclides de Carvalho Leal (until 15 March)
 - João Bosco Ramos de Lima (from 15 March)
 
 - Bahia: 
- Menandro Minahim (until 15 March)
 - Edvaldo Brandão Correia (from 15 March)
 
 - Ceará: 
- Francisco Humberto Bezerra (until 15 March)
 - José Waldemar de Alcântara e Silva (from 15 March)
 
 - Espírito Santo: 
- Henrique Pretti (until 15 March)
 - Carlos Alberto Lindenberg von Schilgen (from 15 March)
 
 - Goiás: 
- Ursulino Tavares Leão (until 15 March)
 - José Luís Bittencourt (from 15 March)
 
 - Maranhão: 
- Alexandre Sá Colares Moreira (until 15 March)
 - José Duailibe Murad (from 15 March)
 
 - Mato Grosso: 
- José Monteiro de Figueiredo (until 15 March)
 - Cássio Leite de Barros (from 15 March)
 
 - Minas Gerais: 
- Celso Porfírio de Araújo Machado (until 15 March)
 - Levindo Ozanam Coelho (from 15 March)
 
 - Pará: 
- Newton Burlamaqui Barreira (until 15 March)
 - Clovis Silva de Morais Rego (from 15 March)
 
 - Paraíba: 
- Clóvis Bezerra Cavalcanti (until 15 March)
 - Dorgival Terceiro Neto (from 15 March)
 
 - Paraná: 
- Jaime Canet Júnior (until 15 March)
 - Octávio Cesário Pereira Júnior (from 15 March)
 
 - Pernambuco: 
- José Antônio Barreto Guimarães (until 15 March)
 - Paulo Gustavo de Araújo Cunha (from 15 March)
 
 - Piauí: 
- Sebastião Rocha Leal (until 15 March)
 - Djalma Martins Veloso (from 15 March)
 
 - Rio Grande do Norte: 
- Tertius Rebelo (until 15 March)
 - Geraldo Melo (from 15 March)
 
 - Rio de Janeiro: 
- Teotônio Araújo (until 15 March)
 - Vacant thereafter (from 15 March)
 
 - Rio Grande do Sul: 
- Edmar Fetter (until 15 March)
 - José Augusto Amaral de Sousa (from 15 March)
 
 - Santa Catarina: 
- Atílio Francisco Xavier Fontana (until 15 March)
 - Marcos Henrique Büechler(from 15 March)
 
 - São Paulo: 
- Antonio José Rodrigues Filho (until 15 March)
 - Ferreira Filho (from 15 March)
 
 - Sergipe: 
- Adalberto Moura (until 15 March)
 - Antônio Ribeiro Sotelo (from 15 March)
 
 
Events
March
- March 15: The state of Guanabara merges into the state of Rio de Janeiro, in accordance to a complementary law approved the previous year.[1]
 
June
- June 4-7: Romanian President Nicolae Ceauşescu arrives in Brasilia for a four-day visit to Brazil and a meeting with President Ernesto Geisel at the Planalto Palace.[2]
 - June 27: Brazil signs a nuclear agreement with the Federal Republic of Germany, in Bonn.[3]
 
August
October
- October 25: The director of journalism at TV Cultura, Vladimir Herzog, is found dead in a simulated suicide on the premises of DOI-CODI in São Paulo.[5]
 
Births
January
- 6 January: Ricardo Santos, beach volleyball player
 - 30 January: Juninho Pernambucano, footballer[6]
 
April
- 14 April: Anderson Silva, mixed martial artist
 
May
- 8 May:
 - 10 May: Hélio Castroneves, racing driver
 
July
- 14 July: Derlei, footballer
 - 16 July: Ana Paula Arósio, actress and model[7]
 
August
- 22 August: Rodrigo Santoro, actor
 
September
- 7 September: Renato Sobral, martial artist
 - 21 September: Acelino Freitas, boxer and politician
 
November
Deaths
April
- April 21: Ranieri Mazzilli, 23rd and 25th President of Brazil (born 1910)
 
November
- November 28: Érico Veríssimo, writer (born 1905)
 
References
- ↑ "Faria Lima promete valorização do homem" (página 5 do 1° caderno), Folha de S.Paulo (16 de março de 1975).
 - ↑ "Geisel reúne-se com Ceausescu" (primeira página do 1° caderno), Folha de S.Paulo (4 de junho de 1975).
 - ↑ "Brasil inicia seu programa nuclear" (primeira página do 1° caderno), Folha de S.Paulo (28 de junho de 1975).
 - ↑ "Portal Embraer".
 - ↑ "II Exército anuncia suicídio de jornalista" (página 3 do 1° caderno), Folha de S.Paulo (27 de outubro de 1975).
 - ↑ "Juninho". mlssoccer.com.
 - ↑ "Ana Paula Arósio". rottentomatoes.com.
 - ↑ "General Information about the player Luizão". national-football-teams.com.
 
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1975 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.
.svg.png.webp)
