THE BEGINNING OF COLONIAL BRAZIL 123
East, forced the king to assign to private individuals
the major responsibility for the colonization of Bra-
zil. This responsibility took the form of the captaincy
system, already used by Portugal in Madeira, the
Azores, and the Cape Verde Islands. The Brazilian
coastline was divided into fi fteen parallel strips ex-
tending inland to the uncertain line of Tordesillas.
These strips were granted as hereditary captain-
cies to a dozen individuals, each of whom agreed
to colonize, develop, and defend his captaincy or
captaincies at his own expense. The captaincy sys-
tem represented a curious fusion of feudal and com-
mercial elements. The grantee or donatory was not
only a vassal who owed allegiance to his lord the
king, but he was also a businessman who hoped to
derive large profi ts from his own estates and from
taxes obtained from the colonists to whom he had
given land. This fusion of feudal and commercial
elements characterized the entire Portuguese colo-
nial enterprise in Brazil from the beginning.
Few of the captaincies proved successful from ei-
ther the economic or political point of view because
few donatories possessed the combination of invest-
ment capital and administrative ability required to
MARANHÃO
MATO GROSSO
PARANÁ
GOIÁS
MINAS GERAIS
RIO DE JANEIRO
ESPÍRITO SANTO
BAHIA
CEARÁ
RIO
GRANDE
DO NORTE
ALAGOAS
SERGIPE
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SANTACATARINA
SÃOPAULO
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Santa Cruz
São Paulo
Santos
Colônia de Sacramento
Pôrto Seguro
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Fortaleza
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0 500 Mi.
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MaIlharajó
Ilha Santa Catarina
SOUTH
AMERICA
Area of
main map
Colonial Brazil