The History of Soccer in Brazil

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The greatest footballing country on the planet is Brazil. Brazil is a country that wins 80% of its football matches. They have a record five Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) World Cups, eight Confederação Sul-Americana de Futebol (CONMEBOL) Copa Ameríca titles, and three FIFA Confederations Cup titles have created a football giant. How did a country on the periphery like Brazil become so dominant? What were the patterns of continuity and change that created this footballing leviathan? How did this sport transcend individual cultures and cultural regions? What were the significant social, political, and economic ramifications for all of the people involved? Brazil’s dominance in football is an indirect result of the cross-cultural interactions that were established from the transcontinental connection of people across the Atlantic and the dynamic changes that followed.

The beginning of Brazil’s footballing greatness has its roots in the cross-cultural interactions within the Atlantic world. According to Jerry Bentley, trade, mass migration, and empire building are key categories within the process of cross-cultural interaction. Cross-cultural interaction beyond the South American continent did not occur until 1500. Prior to 1500, native Brazilians were traditionally mostly semi-nomadic tribes who subsisted on hunting, fishing, gathering, and migrant agriculture. Many of the estimated 2,000 nations and tribes that existed in 1500 died out as a consequence of the European settlement. In 1500 Pedro Alvares Cabral sailed by accident to Brazil. After 1500, an influx of new people, Europeans and Africans, arrived. Europeans, Africans, and indigenous people provided the right mixture to create chan...

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