Couto de Magalhães
1837–1898 (age 61)
Biography
José Vieira Couto de Magalhães (1 November 1837 – 14 September 1898) was a Brazilian politician, military officer, writer and folklorist.
Magalhães began his studies at Mariana Seminar. He studied mathematics at the Military Academy of Rio de Janeiro and attended the course in Field Artillery in London. He graduated from in law at São Paulo Law School in 1859.
Couto de Magalhães knew the interior of Brazil and was the initiator of steam navigation in the Brazilian Highlands. He has advised the State and MP for Goiás and Mato Grosso. He was president of the provinces of Goiás (8 January 1863 – 5 April 1864); Pará (29 July 1864 – 8 May 1866); Mato Grosso (2 February 1867 – 13 April 1868) and São Paulo (10 June – 16 November 1889), term during which the republic was proclaimed. Arrested and sent to Rio de Janeiro, Magalhães was released in recognition of his huge culture and actions of society for clearing the Brazilian backlands.
Magalhães spoke French, English, German, Italian, Tupi and numerous indigenous dialects. he was the one who started the folklore studies in Brazil, publishing O Selvagem (The Wild) (1876) and Testes de antropologia (Anthropology testing) (1894), among others.
He founded in 1885 the first astronomical observatory in the state of São Paulo, at his farm in Great Bridge on the River Tietê.
Couto de Magalhães is the patron in the following academies of letters: