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|group= European immigration to Brazil |poptime= 91,051,646 47.73% of brazilians of european descendant〔(【引用サイトリンク】date=8 November 2011 )〕 |popplace= Entire country; highest percents found in southern and southeastern Brazil |langs=Portuguese minorities speak Talian, assorted German dialects, mainly Riograndenser Hunsrückisch and Polish. Other smaller minorities include Ukrainian, Dutch, Yiddish and Hebrew.|rels=Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, Non-religious, Jehovah Witnesses, Mormonism, Orthodoxy, Judaism and Buddhism. |title=Brazil: resident White population, by religion, Census 2000 |publisher=Sidra.ibge.gov.br |date= |accessdate=2014-01-23}} European immigration to Brazil refers to the movement of European people to Brazil. It should not be confused with the colonisation of the country by the Portuguese. ==History== Maria Stella Ferreira Levy〔() Maria Stella Ferreira Levy. O papel da migração internacional na evolução da população brasileira (1872 a 1972) p. 52.〕 suggests the following periodisation of the process of immigration to Brazil: *1. 1820-1876: small number of immigrants (about 6,000 per year), predominance of Portuguese (45.73%), with significant numbers of Germans (12.97%); *2. 1877-1903: large number of immigrants (about 71,000 per year), predominance of Italians (58.49%); *3. 1904-1930: large number of immigrants (about 79,000 per year), predominance of the Portuguese (36.97%); *4. 1931-1963: declining number of immigrants (about 33,500 per year), predominance of the Portuguese (38.45%). During the first two of these periods, immigration to Brazil was almost exclusively of European origin, and it remained majoritarily so during all four of them, in spite of the increasing importance of Japanese immigration. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「European immigration to Brazil」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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