This article is more than 2 years old.

June 21, 2013 This article is more than 2 years old.

Reuters A map of Brazil’s recent major protests.

The biggest protests to hit Brazil in over 20 years just got a whole lot bigger.

Yesterday, Brazilian dissenters called for people across the country to rally, and rally they did. More than a million people in some 100 cities across Brazil took to the streets last night. Some even put the number of protestors at closer to 2 million.

While the vast majority of protests were non-violent, many people resorted to throwing stones, looting storefronts, lighting cars on fire and pulling down street signs and lamp posts. Brazilian police responded with blockades, pepper spray and tear gas. More than 40 people were injured, and at least one person has died.

This is what the mayhem looked like.

AP Photo/Nelson Antoine Protesters gathered for a new wave of massive demonstrations in Brazil on Thursday evening to denounce poor public services and government corruption.

Reuters/Paulo Santos Demonstrators participate in one of many protests around Brazil’s major cities in Belem, at the mouth of the Amazon River.

Reuters/Marcos Brindicci Demonstrators fight during a protest in Recife City.

Reuters/Stringer There was violence between protesters, too. Here, a bloodied demonstrator in Sao Paulo who claims to have been attacked by another demonstrator, walks away from the crowd during one of many protests around Brazil’s major cities.

AP Photo/Felipe Dana Amidst the chaos, looters hit the city. Here, a bank that was attacked during an anti-government protest in Rio de Janeiro is covered in shattered glass.

AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano Police responded to protests with tear gas and blockades. Here, military police fire tear gas at protestors during an anti-government demonstration in Rio de Janeiro.

AP Photo/Felipe Dana Here, a protestor confronts a blockade of police in Rio de Janeiro.

Reuters/Ueslei Marcelino Demonstrators protesting against the government of Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff in front of the National Congress in Brasilia confronting smoke screens and tear gas.

AP Photo/Eraldo Peres Army soldiers stood guard in defense of the presidential palace during a protest in Brasilia.