*** Welcome to piglix ***

Brazilian navy

Brazilian Navy
Marinha do Brasil
Coat of arms of the Brazilian Navy.svg
Seal of the Brazilian Navy
Active 1822–present
Country  Brazil
Type Navy
Size 60,000 personnel (incl 15,000 marines)
112 ships
81 aircraft
Part of Ministry of Defence
Navy Command
Headquarters Brasília, DF
Patron Marquis of Tamandaré
Colors Blue and white         
March (English: "White Swan")
Fleet 5 submarines
1 aircraft carrier
9 frigates
4 corvettes
5 landing craft
34 patrol boats
6 mine countermeasures vessel
Engagements War of Independence (1821–24)
Confederation of the Equator (1824)
Cisplatine War (1825–28)
Cabanagem Revolt (1835–40)
Ragamuffin War (1835–45)
Balaiada Revolt (1835–41)
Platine War (1851–52)
Uruguayan War (1864–65)
Paraguayan War (1864–70)
Naval Revolt (1893–94)
Federalist War (1893-1895)
World War I (1917–18)
Lieutenants Revolts (1922–27)
Constitutionalist war (1932)
World War II (1942–45)
Lobster War (1962–63)
Araguaia guerrilla (1972–74)
"UN missions"
Haiti (2004–present)
Lebanon (2011–present)
Commanders
Commander-in-Chief President Michel Temer
Navy Commander Admiral Eduardo Leal Ferreira
Notable
commanders
Thomas Cochrane
John Pascoe Grenfell
Baron of Amazonas
Marquis of Tamandaré
Viscount of Inhaúma
Pedro Max Frontin
Augusto Rademaker Grünewald
Insignia
Ensign Flag of Brazil.svg
Jack Naval Jack of Brazil.svg
Flag Flag of the Brazilian Navy.png
Roundel Roundel of the Brazilian Navy.png
Aircraft flown
Attack A-4 Skyhawk
Helicopter SH-3 Sea King, AS-332 Super Puma, Super Lynx, Esquilo, Bell Jet Ranger, SH-60 Seahawk, Eurocopter EC725

The Brazilian Navy (Portuguese: Marinha do Brasil) is the naval service branch of the Brazilian Armed Forces, responsible for conducting naval operations. The Brazilian Navy is the largest navy in South America and in Latin America, and the second largest navy in the Americas, after the United States Navy.

The navy was involved in Brazil's war of independence from Portugal. Most of Portugal's naval forces and bases in South America were transferred to the newly independent country. In the initial decades following independence, the country maintained a large naval force and the navy was later involved in the Cisplatine War, the River Plate conflicts, the Paraguayan War as well as other sporadic rebellions that marked Brazilian history.

By the 1880s the Brazilian Imperial Navy was the most powerful in South America. After the 1893 naval rebellion, there was a hiatus in the development of the navy until 1905, when Brazil acquired two of the most powerful and advanced dreadnoughts of the day which sparked dreadnought race with Brazil's South American neighbours. The Brazilian Navy participated in both World War I and World War II, engaging in anti-submarine patrols in the Atlantic.


...
Wikipedia

...