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Eduardo Gomes information


Eduardo Gomes
Minister of Aeronautics
In office
January 11, 1965 – March 15, 1967
PresidentCastelo Branco
Preceded byMárcio Melo
Succeeded byMárcio Melo
In office
August 24, 1954 – November 11, 1955
PresidentCafé Filho
Carlos Luz
Preceded byEpaminondas Gomes dos Santos
Succeeded byVasco Alves Seco
Personal details
BornSeptember 20, 1896
Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Died13 June 1981(1981-06-13) (aged 84)
Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Political partyUDN
Military service
AllegianceEduardo Gomes Brazil
Branch/serviceBrazilian Air Force
Years of service1918-1967
RankMarechal-do-ar
(Marshal of the Air)
Battles/wars18 of the Copacabana Fort revolt
Constitutionalist Revolution
Communist Uprising of 1935
World War II

Air Marshal Eduardo Gomes (20 September 1896 – 13 June 1981) was a Brazilian politician and military figure. He was born in Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil.

Gomes joined the army when he started his course at the Military School of Realengo. He finished this course in 1918 and, in December of the same year, he was transferred to Curitiba. In 1921 he started his course at the Military Aviation School in Rio de Janeiro. In the same year, the presidential campaign divided the oligarchies. Some military officers planned a coup to stop the candidate of the party in power, Artur Bernardes, if he was elected. However, the imprisonment of ex-president Hermes da Fonseca and the closing of the Military Club precipitated the start of a rebellion on July 5, 1922. The rebels gave up quickly and only 28 resisted inside the Fort Copacabana. Gomes proposed that the rebels leave the fortress and face the government troops. They left, armed, and the diehard rebel group is still known as the 18 of the Copacabana Fortress.

Gomes was arrested but in 1923 he left prison. At the end of 1924, Gomes tried to join another rebellion in the south of Brazil led by Luís Carlos Prestes. He was arrested in Santa Catarina and transferred to Rio de Janeiro. He was transferred from one prison to another, until he was sent to Trindade Island.

When Washington Luís became President of Brazil in 1926, all the prisoners from Trindade Island were released. The next June, Gomes was nearly arrested again, but he escaped to Campos, in Rio de Janeiro. Two years later, he handed himself in to the authorities and was imprisoned for two years.

In 1930, Gomes was freed, and once again was involved in revolutionary activities—this time with the intent of preventing president-elect Júlio Prestes from taking office. With the victory of the rebels, the ouster of president Washington Luís, and his replacement by Getúlio Vargas, he remained in high military command and notably led the 1st Aviation Division against a communist uprising in 1935. However, he resigned his military command following the establishment of the Estado Novo and became an opponent of Vargas.

Gomes was in the group that created the Military Air Post (Correio Aéreo Militar, CAM) in 1931. In December 1945 Gomes was the candidate of the anti-Vargas conservative UDN for President of Brazil, but he lost the election to Eurico Gaspar Dutra. In October 1950 he ran again and lost to Getúlio Vargas.

In 1954 he was the Minister of Aeronautics in the brief administration of João Café Filho that followed the suicide of President Vargas. He was in favor of the military takeover in 1964 that overthrew João Goulart, a vice-president who had taken office in 1961 upon the resignation of Jânio Quadros. In February 1965, still as Minister of Aeronautics, Gomes signed a controversial decree that shut down Panair do Brasil, the country's flag carrier airline. He remained as Minister of Aeronautics until the end of the government of Humberto de Alencar Castelo Branco, when he left public life (1967). Eduardo Gomes died on June 13, 1981.

Eduardo Gomes International Airport, in Manaus, Amazonas, is named after him.

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Eduardo Gomes

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Air Marshal Eduardo Gomes (20 September 1896 – 13 June 1981) was a Brazilian politician and military figure. He was born in Petrópolis, Rio de Janeiro...

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Eduardo Gomes International Airport

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Manaus–Eduardo Gomes International Airport (IATA: MAO, ICAO: SBEG) is an international airport serving Manaus, Brazil. On December 11, 1973, while still...

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Brigadeiro

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Heloisa Nabuco de Oliveira, to promote the presidential candidacy of Eduardo Gomes. It is made of condensed milk, cocoa powder, butter, and chocolate sprinkles...

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Flamengo Park

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Flamengo Park, also known as Aterro do Flamengo, Eduardo Gomes Park, and Aterro do Brigadeiro Eduardo Gomes, is the largest public park and recreation area...

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Gomes

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academic Diogo Gomes (c. 1420–1500), Portuguese navigator and explorer Eduardo Gomes (1896–1981), Brazilian soldier and politician Egas Gomes de Sousa(1035...

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Manaus

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Linhas Aéreas and Manaus Aerotáxi, have headquarters on the grounds of Eduardo Gomes International Airport in Manaus. The initial idea of a Free Trade Port...

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List of the busiest airports in Brazil

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Marechal Rondon International Airport Cuiabá 2,960,967 38.41% 1 17 Eduardo Gomes International Airport Manaus 2,726,909 20.72% 1 18 Eurico de Aguiar...

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Copacabana Fort revolt

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much superior forces. Of the lieutenants, only Siqueira Campos and Eduardo Gomes survived in the hospital. The July 1922 revolts failed, but Artur Bernardes...

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Gensa

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Bandeirante PT-SOG. At the end of 2017, GENSA transferred its only plane to Eduardo Gomes International Airport, in Manaus, starting to operate in partnership...

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Tenentism

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Campos and Eduardo Gomes to confront the army loyalists; the eighteen made a last stand on the beach, where sixteen were killed and two, Gomes and Campos...

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1950 Brazilian general election

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(UDN), noted for its radical anti-Vargas posture, once again nominated Eduardo Gomes as its candidate. The party proved woefully unable to expand its narrow...

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Vinci SA

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operate for 30 years the following airports in Brazil: Manaus-Brig. Eduardo Gomes International Airport, Tabatinga International Airport, Tefé Airport...

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Brazilian Air Force

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advisers, Captains Vasco Alves Secco and Carlos Pfaltzgraff Brazil. Major Eduardo Gomes, commander of the Joint Aviation Group, who since the outbreak of hostilities...

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Semipermeable membrane

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doi:10.1016/j.desal.2012.05.030. ISSN 0011-9164. Coutinho de Paula, Eduardo; Gomes, Júlia Célia Lima; Amaral, Míriam Cristina Santos (July 2017). "Recycling...

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List of Copa Airlines destinations

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MNMG Augusto C. Sandino International Airport Manaus Brazil MAO SBEG Eduardo Gomes International Airport Manta Ecuador MEC SEMT Eloy Alfaro International...

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Monument to the Dead of World War II

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located in Flamengo Park (also known as Aterro do Flamengo and Parque Eduardo Gomes) on Guanabara Bay, in the Flamengo neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil...

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List of airports in Brazil

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Zumbi dos Palmares International Airport AENA Manaus AM SBEG MAO AM0001 Eduardo Gomes International Airport Vinci SA Manhuaçu MG SNJM JMA MG0050 Elias Breder...

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Marshal of the air force

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from the original on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2008-08-22. "Marechal-do-Ar Eduardo Gomes, Patron of the Brazilian Air Force - HISTORY OF THE BRAZILIAN AIR FORCE"...

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