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Why is Brazil the most heterogeneous?

Before Columbus discovered the New World, Indians lived in the primitive commune system in the vast land of Brazil. Unlike the Indians in Peru and Mexico, they have not yet formed the form of early countries, and there is almost no contact between tribes. Therefore, in the face of the invasion of Portuguese colonists, they had to retreat to the hinterland and hardly resisted. As the Portuguese pushed inland, the mixed-race between Portuguese and Indians gradually increased, and the Portuguese government at that time encouraged this kind of mixed-race.

Later, with the development of plantations, many African blacks were trafficked here. Millions of trafficked blacks are engaged in hard labor in sugarcane plantations, gold mines and diamond mines, so a large number of mixed-race Indians and whites, whites and blacks, Indians and blacks have appeared in Brazil.

From 65438 to 0882, Brazil was no longer ruled by Portugal, and the demand for labor was increasing in the wasteland and coffee plantations in the southern border area, attracting a large number of poor and unemployed workers from Portugal, Spain, Italy, Germany and Arabia to move there. At the beginning of this century, poor people from Japan and other Asian countries also moved to Brazil in large numbers.

Indians can be seen everywhere in the virgin forests of the Amazon River basin in Brazil, which can be said to be the Indian kingdom. In the Brazilian plateau, especially Recife and Bahia, there are a large number of blacks. In the south, some cities are inhabited by Italians or Germans. There are also some places where a large number of Japanese live together. In some places, almost everyone has it: whites, blacks, Indians, Indo-European hybrids, mulattoes, Indian blacks, yellow people, Arabs ... Brazil deserves to be the most complex country in the world.