Yahoo France Recherche Web

Résultats de recherche

  1. 30 avr. 2023 · Petropolis, Brazil is a historical area with a mild climate that attracted the Brazilian Emperor, D. Pedro I, to build his summer house there. His son, D. Pedro II, continued the plan and designed settler villages and other areas, making Petropolis one of the first designed cities in Brazil.

  2. 21 mai 2024 · Luís was born at Petrópolis on 26 January 1878, to Prince Gaston d'Orléans, Count of Eu, and Isabel, then Princess Imperial of Brazil. His maternal grandparents were Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil, and Princess Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies while his paternal grandparents were Prince Louis, Duke of Nemours, and Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. He was named after his paternal ...

  3. Growth of Pedro II of Brazil. In the life of Pedro II of Brazil, growth in both his personal and public roles took place in the decade beginning in 1853. At the start of this period, he was still struggling to find his way. But by its end the Emperor was a mature and steady leader, and Brazil was united and on its way to unprecedented national ...

  4. Ruby, thank you for taking your time to look at it. The sources to the sentence above, where it says that Pedro II's reputation was restored and his remains were returned to Brazil, and etc, etc, can be seen in the section Pedro II of Brazil#Legacy. The other remakrs you made Astynax already corrected it.

  5. Nevertheless, Pedro II tried to pacify the nation in a speech from the throne on 6 May 1865 during which he addressed concerns such as public health, the economy, and the marriages of his daughters. He calmly made only brief mentions of the ongoing conflict with Great Britain and the Paraguayan invasion. [5] He was reluctant for the Empire to ...

  6. Dom Pedro II of Brazil (complete name: Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga; Rio de Janeiro, December 2, 1825 — Paris, December 5, 1891), known as O Magnânimo ( The Magnanimous) ( Portuguese: O Magnânimo ), [1], was the second and last de facto Brazilian ...

  7. Pedro II was, in fact, the Chadest. Yeah, the 4 line meme format simply doesn't do the man justice; there's just a lot of info I couldn't fit in there. My personal favorite would probably be his last words: "May God grant me these last wishes—peace and prosperity for Brazil".