- Source: 1963 in Brazil
Events in the year 1963 in Brazil.
Incumbents
= Federal government
=President: João Goulart
Prime Minister: Hermes Lima (until 23 January)
Vice President: vacant
= Governors
=Acre: Vacant
Alagoas: Luis Cavalcante
Amazonas:
Gilberto Mestrinho (until 25 March)
Plínio Ramos Coelho (from 25 March)
Bahia:
Juracy Magalhães (until 7 April)
Lomanto Junior (from 7 April)
Ceará:
Parsifal Barroso (until 25 March)
Virgílio Távora (from 25 March)
Espírito Santo:
Asdrúbal Martins Soares (until 31 January)
Francisco Lacerda de Aguiar (from 31 January)
Goiás: Mauro Borges
Guanabara: Carlos Lacerda
Maranhão: Newton de Barros Belo
Mato Grosso: Fernando Corrêa da Costa
Minas Gerais: José de Magalhães Pinto
Pará: Aurélio do Carmo
Paraíba: Pedro Gondim
Paraná: Nei Braga
Pernambuco:
Cid Sampaio (until 31 January)
Miguel Arraes (from 31 January)
Piauí:
Tibério Nunes (until 25 March)
Petrônio Portella (from 25 March)
Rio de Janeiro:
José Janotti (until 18 January)
Luís Miguel Pinaud (18 January-31 January)
Badger da Silveira (from 31 January)
Rio Grande do Norte: Aluízio Alves
Rio Grande do Sul:
Leonel Brizola (until 25 March)
Ildo Meneghetti (from 25 March)
Santa Catarina: Celso Ramos
São Paulo:
Carlos Alberto Alves de Carvalho Pinto (until 31 January)
Ademar de Barros (from 31 January)
Sergipe:
Dionísio Machado (until 30 January)
Horácio Dantas de Goes (30 January-31 January)
João de Seixas Dória (from 31 January)
= Vice governors
=Alagoas: Teotônio Brandão Vilela
Bahia: Orlando Moscoso
Ceará:
Wilson Gonçalves (until 31 January)
Joaquim de Figueiredo Correia (from 25 March)
Espírito Santo: Rubens Rangel (from 31 January)
Goiás:
Antônio Rezende Monteiro (until 31 January)
Vacant thereafter (from 31 January)
Maranhão: Alfredo Salim Duailibe
Mato Grosso: Jose Garcia Neto
Minas Gerais: Clóvis Salgado da Gama
Pará: Newton Burlamaqui de Miranda
Paraíba: André Avelino de Paiva Gadelha
Pernambuco: Paulo Pessoa Guerra
Piauí: João Clímaco d'Almeida
Rio de Janeiro: João Batista da Costa (from 31 January)
Rio Grande do Norte: Teodorico Bezerra (from 19 January)
Santa Catarina: Armindo Marcílio Doutel de Andrade
São Paulo:
Porfírio da Paz (until 31 January)
Laudo Natel (from 31 January)
Sergipe: Celso Carvalho (from 31 January)
Events
= January
=January 6: A plebiscite chooses the presidential system over a parliamentary one. As a result, the office of the Prime Minister is abolished.
January 8: The flag of Minas Gerais is instituted.
= March
=March 12: The first Korean immigrants arrive in Brazil.
= April
=April 20-May 5: The 1963 Pan American Games are held in São Paulo.
= May
=May 23: The Brazilian national team wins its second World Men's Basketball Championship by beating the Soviet Union by 90 to 79 points, in Rio de Janeiro.
= July
=July 20: Ieda Maria Vargas becomes the first Brazilian to win the Miss Universe title, which is held in Miami Beach, Florida, United States of America.
= October
=October 7: The Ipatinga massacre takes place, after military police shot at Usiminas employees.
= November
=November 16: Santos FC becomes the first Brazilian club to win a second Intercontinental Cup (football).
= December
=December 4: Senator Arnon de Melo, who was trying to shoot Senator Silvestre Péricles, shot and killed alternate Senator José Kairala.
Births
= January
=January 5 – Luís Carlos Winck, footballer and coach
January 12 – Nando Reis, musician and producer
= March
=March 11 – Marcos Pontes, astronaut and politician
= October
=October 31 – Dunga, footballer and coach
= November
=November 2 – Valdemiro Santiago, evangelical pastor
Deaths
November 4 – Carlos Magalhães de Azeredo, poet and writer (b. 1872)
See also
1963 in Brazilian football
1963 in Brazilian television
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Tim nasional bola voli putra Brasil
- Pelé
- Franklin Schaffner
- Luiz Carlos Barreto
- Soekarno
- Nekrofilia
- Perang Lobster
- Michel Temer
- Efek kupu-kupu
- Majapahit
- 1963 in Brazil
- Brazil
- 1963
- Miss Universe 1963
- 1963 in Brazilian television
- 1963 request for a state of exception in Brazil
- 1963 in Brazilian football
- Lobster War
- Brazil national football team
- Brazil at the 1963 Pan American Games