This article is about the city near São Paulo. For the nearby city, seeEmbu-Guaçu. For the city in Kenya, seeEmbu, Kenya. For the ethnic group in Kenya, seeEmbu people. For their language, seeEmbu language.
The history of Embu began in 1554, with the arrival of a group of Jesuits of the aldeamento or settlement of Bohi, later M'Boy, halfway between the sea and the São Paulo hinterlands. As the Jesuit missions in the interior of Brazil, the primary objective was to convert the native population to Roman Catholicism, in an attempt to use them as farm workers in the region.
In 1607 the lands of the village passed to the hands ofFernão Dias (uncle of the bandeirante Fernão Dias, the emerald hunter), In 1690, the priest Belchior de Pontes initiated the construction of the Igreja do Rosário (the Church of the Rosary), when it transferred at the same time to the nucleus of the original village. In 1760, by order of thePortuguese Crown, the Jesuits were expelled from Brazil because they interfered in colonist affairs, such as protecting converted natives from the Bandeiras, which sought to enslave them.
The artistic vocation of the city started to project itself in 1937, whenCássio M'Boy, "santeiro" – sculptor of religious images – in Embu, gained first prize at the Exposition Internationel d'Arts Techniques du Paris. Before that, Cássio had been the professor of some renowned artists and received illustrious representatives of the Modernismo movement of 1922, includingAnita Malfatti,Tarsila do Amaral,Oswald de Andrade,Menotti Del Picchia,Volpi andYoshio Takaoka.[4]
One of Cássio M'Boy's most successful disciples wasSakai de Embu, internationally known and one of the greatest Brazilian ceramist-sculptors. In 1962, Sakai formed theSolano Trindade group of plastic artists, highly influenced by African-Brazilian art and the religious tradition of theYorubaorishahs. This group included Solano Trindade and later his daughterRaquel Trindade.
The artistic tradition of Embu is an institution with projects and events done both in Brazil and abroad since 1964. The Feira de Artes and Artesanato do Embu (Arts and Handicraft of Embu) was launched in the late 1960s and it has been attracting tourists and revenues to the city ever since.
One of the topNazi torturers,Josef Mengele was buried in the Nossa Senhora do Rosario cemetery in Embu under his false identity, Wolfgang Gerhard,[5] as the southern region of the city of São Paulo and its borders are known for a sizable German-Brazilian population.