Brazilian Constitution of 1824

The Political Constitution of the Empire of Brazil (Portuguese: Constituição Política do Império do Brasil) commonly referred to as the Constitution of 1824, was Brazil's first constitution, issued on 25 March 1824 and revoked on 24 February 1891. In force during the period of the Empire of Brazil, it was issued at the emperor's request, that is, unilaterally imposed by the will of emperor Pedro I, who had ordered it from the Council of State. Pedro had dissolved the Constituent Assembly in 1823 and, through the Constitution of 1824, imposed his own political project on the country. The same Pedro later issued, in Portugal, the Constitutional Charter of 29 April 1826, inspired by the Brazilian model.

Political Constitution of the Empire of Brazil
Cover of the imperial constitution of 1824 in the custody of the Brazilian National Archives
Overview
JurisdictionEmpire of Brazil
Date effective25 March 1824
SystemParliamentary unitarian constitutional monarchy
Government structure
Branches4
ChambersBicameral
ExecutiveEmperor
JudiciarySupreme Tribunal of Justice
LocationBrazilian National Archives
Commissioned byPedro I of Brazil
Author(s)Council of State
Signatories
List
  • Pedro I of Brazil
    Maciel da Costa
    Carvalho e Melo
    Ferreira França
    Pereira da Fonseca
    Silveira Mendonça
    Vilela Barbosa
    Álvares de Almeida
    Pereira da Cunha
    Nogueira da Gama
    Carneiro de Campos
Full text
Constitution of the Empire of Brazil at Wikisource

It remained in force for 65 years, until the promulgation of the Constitution of 1891, followed by Decree No. 1 of 15 November 1889, which replaced the political ordering of the Empire of Brazil. It was the longest-running constitution in Brazil. Among its innovations were freedom of religious worship (although the official State religion remained Catholic), freedom of the press and opinion, and the institution of the Moderating Power.

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