NOTE: In a documentary that i watched about capoeira, in Bahia (as in other parts of the world), the Blacks were said not refer to themselves as Black because of the negative stigma. Those who would be considered Black prototypically identify as other, even White!! Census takers in Cuba were shocked when the local "Blacks" referred to themselves as White. That's why I am not certain about such figures, although they are informative.
 
 
Brazil had a large amount of immigrant from europe in the 19th-20th century.
 
Beginning in the 19th century, the Brazilian government stimulated 
European immigration to substitute for the manpower of the former slaves. The first non-Portuguese 
immigrants to settle in Brazil were 
German, in 1824. In 1869 the first 
Polish immigrants settled in Brazil. However, strong 
European immigration to Brazil began only after 1875, when immigration from 
Italy, 
Portugal and 
Spain increased. According to the 
Memorial do Imigrante, between 1870 and 1953, Brazil attracted nearly 5.5 million immigrants -- approximately 1,550,000 
Italians, 1,470,000 
Portuguese, 650,000 
Spaniards, 210,000 
Germans, 
French, 190,000 
Japanese, 120,000 
Poles and 
Russians, and 650,000 of many other nationalities. These figures may be a serious undercounting of the actual numbers of immigrants, since the spouses were often not counted; there were large numbers of illegals never counted; the family names were changed to hide national origins; and Brazilian record-keeping was slipshod. Brazil is home to the largest 
Italian population outside of Italy, with 25 million Italians and 
Italian-descended Brazilians. Brazil is also home to the largest 
Lebanese community outside of 
Lebanon, roughly 8 million.
 
Brazil's population is mostly concentrated along the coast, with a lower population density in the interior. The population of the southern states is mainly of European descent, while the majority of the inhabitants of the north and northeast are of mixed ancestry (Amerindians, Africans and Europeans