Peter II of Brazil
Dom Pedro II, Emperor of Brazil — in full, Pedro de Alcântara João Carlos Leopoldo Salvador Bibiano Francisco Xavier de Paula Leocádio Miguel Rafael Gabriel Gonzaga, By the Grace of God and Unanimous Acclamation of the People, Constitutional Emperor and Perpetual Defender of Brazil — was the second and last Brazilian Emperor.
Pedro II's family.
From left to right: Comte d'Eu,
Pedro II, Teresa, and Isabella.
Pedro II was married September 4, 1843 to Princess Teresa of the Two Sicilies. Their most famous child was Princess Isabella (Isabel), who married Louis Philippe Marie Ferdinand Gaston, comte d'Eu, son of Louis Charles Philippe Raphael, duc de Nemours.
He was in the United States during the Philadelphia's Exposition of 1876, where Alexander Graham Bell showed him his new telephone. Pedro II probably was the first Brazilian to use the invention He recited Shakespeare's classic line from Hamlet, "To be or not to be" into it, and exclamed, "This thing speaks!".
President Ulysses S. Grant and
Pedro II greet the public
from the platform of
a Corliss Steam Engine.
Philadelphia Exposition, 1876.
Photograph of Pedro II in his old age
He died on December 5, 1891 in Paris, France. His and his wife's remains were brought to Brazil in 1922, and were reinterred in Petrópolis, their former summer residence, in 1939.
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| Preceded by: Pedro I | List of Brazilian monarchs | Succeeded by: Presidents of Brazil |