The Brazilian Carnival
The Brazilian Carnival is an annual celebration, celebrated forty days before Easter (marking the start of Lent), in Brazil. It has some differences from its counterparts in Europe, as well there being variations across the large Brazilian territory. The Brazilian Carnival is known in Brazil simply as “carnaval”.
Despite the Catholic inspiration, Brazilian Carnival is celebrated more as a profane feast than a religious event. Its origins are European, by a kind of carnival called Introito (Latin for entrance). The entrudo, as it was known in Brazil, could have been characterized mainly as a joke: to throw water (and later, other things) in other people, to “purify the body”. The entrudo was prohibited, without success, in middle of the 19th Century, as it was considered violent by the upper classes (it is told that many people died from infections and other diseases, since even rotten fruits were sometimes thrown).
In the late 19th Century, the cord?(literally “laces” in Portuguese) were introduced in Rio de Janeiro, which consisted of groups of people that would walk on the streets playing music and dancing. The cord?were ancestors of the modern samba’s school.
The blocos (blocks), another name for the cord? are some of the current representations of the popular Brazilian Carnival. They are formed by people who dress in costumes according to certain themes, or to celebrate the carnival in specific ways. The schools of samba are truly organizations that work all year in order to prepare themselves for the samba schools parade.
The most international known festivity in Brazilian Carnival takes place in Rio de Janeiro, with its samba schools, blocos and bandas that occupy entire neighborhoods. In some cities of the Northeastern Region, such as Salvador, there is another form of the Brazilian Carnival: the Trio El鴲ico. A trio el鴲ico is an adapted truck, with giant speakers and a platform where musicians play songs of local genres such as Ax頭usic and Maracatu.
During the Carnival, a fat man is elected to represent the role of Rei Momo, the “king” of Carnival, whose rule is one of fun instead of that of everyday authorities.