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Valongo Wharf

Coordinates: 22°53′49.6″S 43°11′14.6″W / 22.897111°S 43.187389°W / -22.897111; -43.187389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Valongo Wharf
Portuguese: Cais do Valongo
Cais do Valongo e da Imperatriz archaeological site
Valongo Wharf is located in Brazil
Valongo Wharf
Shown within Brazil
Alternative nameCais da Imperatriz (Empress Wharf)
LocationPort of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Coordinates22°53′49.6″S 43°11′14.6″W / 22.897111°S 43.187389°W / -22.897111; -43.187389
History
Founded1811
Abandoned1911
Site notes
Excavation dates2011
TypeCultural
Criteriavi
Designated2017 (41st session)
Reference no.1548
RegionLatin America and the Caribbean

The Valongo Wharf (Portuguese: Cais do Valongo) is an old dock located in the port area of Rio de Janeiro, between the current Coelho e Castro and Sacadura Cabral streets.[1] Built in 1811, it was the site of landing and trading of enslaved Africans until 1831, with the blockade of Africa banning the Atlantic slave trade to Brazil (but the Brazilian government continued turning a blind eye to the trade until 1850).[2]

During the twenty years of its operation, between 500 thousand and one million slaves landed at Valongo. Brazil received about 4.9 million slaves through the Atlantic trade.[3]

In 1843, the wharf was renovated for the landing of Princess Teresa Cristina of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, who was to marry the emperor D. Pedro II. The wharf was then called Cais da Imperatriz (Empress Wharf).[4]

Between 1850 and 1920, the area around the old pier became a space occupied by black slaves or freedmen of several nations - an area that Heitor dos Prazeres called Pequena África (Little Africa).[5]

History

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Until the mid-1770s, slaves disembarked at Praia do Peixe, now called Praça 15, and were traded in Rua Direita (today Rua 1º de Março), in the center of Rio de Janeiro, in plain sight. In 1774, a new legislation established the transfer of this market to the region of Valongo, on the initiative of the second Marquis of Lavradio, Dom Luís de Almeida Portugal Soares de Alarcão d'Eça e Melo Silva Mascarenhas, viceroy of Brazil, alarmed at "The terrible custom of as soon as the blacks disembark in the port from the African coast, enter the city through the main public thoroughfares, not only loaded with innumerable diseases but naked". [5]

The market was transferred, but the wharf was not built yet, and the alternative was to disembark the slaves at the customs and immediately send them by boat to Valongo, from which they would jump directly onto the beach. In 1779 the slave trade finally settled in the Valongo area, where it reached its peak between 1808 with the arrival of the Portuguese royal family, and in 1831, when the slave trade to Brazil was banned, and it was done clandestinely. [5]

From 1808 the traffic nearly doubles, following the growth of the city that, after the transfer of the Portuguese court to Brazil, goes from 15 thousand to 30 thousand inhabitants. However, it was not until 1811 that the wharf was built, and the landing was done directly on Valongo.[5] From 1811 to 1831, between 500,000 and a million slaves landed there.[1] At the end of the 1820s, the slave trade to Brazil was at its peak. Rio de Janeiro was then an important commercial slave trading post, and Valongo was the main gateway for blacks from Angola, East and Central West Africa - while in Maranhão and Bahia ships came from Guinea and West Africa respectively.[5]

In 1831, the transatlantic slave trade was banned, under pressure from England, and Valongo was closed. The traffickers then proceeded to make the landing in clandestine ports.

In 1843, a 60-centimeter thick embankment was made on the dock of Valongo for the construction of a new anchorage, destined to receive Princess Teresa Cristina, future wife of D. Pedro II. The wharf was then renamed 'Cais da Imperatriz'. But this also would eventually be buried in 1911, during the urban reform undertaken by mayor Pereira Passos.[4][5]

Rediscovery

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In 2011, during the excavations carried out as part of the revitalization works in the Rio de Janeiro port area, the two wharfs - Valongo and Imperatriz - were discovered, one on top of the other, and, along with them, a large number of amulets and worship objects from Congo, Angola and Mozambique.[5][6] IPHAN and the city of Rio de Janeiro inscribed the wharf's archaeological site to the Unesco World Heritage Site Tentative List.[4][7][8] The wharf was then officially designated a World Heritage Site in 2017.[9] As of 2022 the Brazilian Government had not erected a memorial at the site and had taken few steps to raise awareness of its importance.[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Cais do Valongo: a história da escravidão no porto do Rio de Janeiro". Globo.com Educação. Globo.com. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  2. ^ Carneiro, Julia (25 December 2014). "Brazil's hidden slavery past uncovered at Valongo Wharf - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  3. ^ Romero, Simon (2014-03-08). "Rio's Race to Future Intersects Slave Past". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  4. ^ a b c "Cais do Valongo é candidato a Patrimônio da Humanidade". Ministério da Cultura do Brasil. 30 September 2014. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-11-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ Daflon, Rogério (1 March 2011). "Escavações de obra de drenagem da Zona Portuária encontram restos dos cais da Imperatriz e do Valongo". O Globo Rio. O Globo. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  7. ^ "Valongo Wharf Archaeological Site". World Heritage Convention. Unesco. Retrieved 9 January 2015.
  8. ^ "Cais de Zona Portuária pode virar patrimônio da humanidade - TV UOL". Tvuol.uol.com.br. Retrieved 2017-04-10.
  9. ^ "Three new sites and two extensions added to UNESCO's World Heritage List". World Heritage Convention. Unesco. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
  10. ^ McCoy, Terrence (17 January 2022). "More enslaved Africans came to the Americas through this port than anywhere else. Why have so few heard of it?". Washington Post. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
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