Order of Columbus
Ordem do Colombo
Awarded by the Government of Brazil
TypeNational order
StatusAbolished as a state order in 1891
GradesGrand Cross (Grã-cruz)
Grand Officer (Dignitário)
Officer (Oficial)
Knight (Cavaleiro)

Ribbon bar

The Order of Columbus (Brazilian Portuguese: Ordem de Colombo) was a short-lived Brazilian order of merit.[1] It was instituted on 6 June 1890, just two months after the abolition of all Imperial Brazilian Orders.

The first constitution of the Brazilian republic abolished the order of Columbus on 24 February 1891.

The Order consisted of:

  • a Grandmaster,
  • twelve real and twenty-four honorary grand-crosses,
  • fifty dignitaries (Grand-officers),
  • one-hundred and fifty officers, and an unlimited number of knights.


References

  1. Lyra, Augusto Tavares de (1941). Organisção politica e administrativa do Brasil: (colonia, imperio, e republica) (in Brazilian Portuguese). Companhia editora nacional.
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