Swiss Brazilians
Ethnic group
Suíço-Brasileiro | |
---|---|
Swiss descendants in São Paulo. | |
Total population | |
80,000[citation needed] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Brazil: Mainly Southeastern Brazil | |
Languages | |
Portuguese, German, French, Italian | |
Religion | |
Christianity (mostly Protestantism and Roman Catholic) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Other White Brazilian (especially German Brazilians, Austrian Brazilians, Luxembourg Brazilians, French Brazilians and Italian Brazilians), Swiss people |
Swiss Brazilians (Portuguese: helveto-brasileiros, brasileiros suíços) are Brazilian citizens of full or partial Swiss ancestry, who remain culturally connected to Switzerland, or Swiss-born people permanently residing in Brazil.[citation needed][1]
Notable Swiss Brazilians
- Clóvis Bornay
- José Carlos Bauer
- A. C. Frieden
- Émil Goeldi
- Oswaldo Goeldi
- Ernst Götsch
- Cláudio Heinrich
- Heloísa Périssé
- Ricardo Boechat
- Adriana Lima
- Adolfo Lutz
- Berta Lutz
- Jorge Paulo Lemann
- Eric Walther Maleson
- Gérard Moss
- Sabrina Sato
- Leticia Spiller
- Xuxa Meneghel
See also
- Immigration to Brazil
- White Brazilians
- Swiss people
- Swiss Americans
- Swiss Abroad by SWI swissinfo.ch in Portuguese[2]
References
- v
- t
- e
- Argentina
- Australia
- Brazil
- Canada
- Chile
- El Salvador
- Guatemala
- France
- Italy
- Mexico
- Russia
- United States (Pennsylvania Dutch)
- Uruguay
- Venezuela
This Brazil-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e