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Treaty of Tordesillas: How One Line Gave Brazil

The 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas split the world between Spain and Portugal, accidentally giving Brazil its Portuguese language and identity.

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How the Treaty of Tordesillas drew a line that gave Brazil its language

In 1494, two European powers sat down in a small Spanish town and divided the entire planet between them. The Treaty of Tordesillas was that agreement, and its consequences are still visible on every map of South America today. If you have ever wondered why does Brazil speak Portuguese while nearly every other country on the continent speaks Spanish, the answer starts with a line drawn 370 leagues west of Cape Verde. The Treaty of Tordesillas did not just settle a diplomatic dispute. It accidentally decided the cultural fate of 200 million people.

The geopolitical panic before the Treaty of Tordesillas

For most of the 15th century, Portugal dominated European sea exploration. Under Prince Henry the Navigator and other scientific innovators, Portuguese captains worked their way down the West African coast, building trading forts and searching for a direct route to Asian spice markets. By the 1480s, Portugal was arguably the strongest naval power in Europe, having rounded the Cape of Good Hope and established outposts across the Atlantic islands.

Then 1492 happened. Christopher Columbus, funded by the Spanish Crown, reached the Caribbean and threw that Portuguese monopoly into chaos. Spain claimed th

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