Online course
Dates: October 21st and 22nd (Monday and Tuesday)
Hours: 6 PM to 9 PM
Workload: 6 hours
Vacancies: 500
Location: The course will be held in a virtual environment, through the Ipiranga Museum's profile on the YouTube platform.
Free registration: From October 2nd to October 16th at this [website/location]. link. Teachers and students must complete the registration form at the provided link and send a copy of their institutional affiliation document via email: apoioacadmp@usp.br.
Information: email: apoioacadmp@usp.br, tels. (11) 2065-8075/6644
The territories we now call Brazil were the stage for intense disputes between explorers, religious figures, and indigenous peoples. These struggles shaped not only the geographical space but also the country's identity. The course "Territories in Dispute," offered by the Ipiranga Museum, will use these issues as a starting point to deepen the debate on fundamental themes in History and Geography.
The classes will offer a critical and detailed approach to territories, populations, indigenous lands, and other related topics. The focus will be on themes such as the Treaty of Tordesillas, the Hereditary Captaincies, the influence of the Church on territorial formation, and indigenous freedom. The course aims to provide essential resources for teachers who wish to enrich their classes and contribute to the understanding of our complex territorial history.
Classes will be held remotely and streamed live. To receive the certificate, students must sign the attendance sheet on both days of the course.
Presenters: Jorge Pimentel Cintra and Francisco de Carvalho Dias de Andrade
Program:
1. Introduction
2. Whose Earth is it?
3. Look at the sky, draw the Earth.
4. Breaking paradigms: lithics and land ownership
5. War and peace: border treaties
6. The new map of the hereditary captaincies
7. The presence of the Church in the formation of the territory.
8. Settlers, Jesuits, and Indigenous people

