Amador Bueno

[1] Amador held several public office posts through royal appointment and elections.

Bueno finally dissuaded the group and urged loyalty to John IV.

Unrest among the citizens of São Paulo caused that Bueno had to seek sanctuary in the convent of Saint Bento.

Amador Bueno left many descendants, some of the most famous include: Carlos Drummond de Andrade, Walter Moreira Salles, Barbara Heliodora, Getúlio Vargas, Tancredo Neves, and Roberto Marinho, among many others.

[2][3][4] According to Albert F. Kunze, who was cited in the 1941 booklet by Rogelio E. Alfaro entitled "Who's Who on the Postage Stamps of Brazil" with a foreword by the then Ambassador of Brazil to the US, Carlos Martins for the Pan American Union, Washington D.C. 1941.