Belém
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Belém, Pará | |||||
| |||||
| Nickname: "Belém do Pará" | |||||
| Local da cidade de Belém, no estado do Pará | |||||
| State | Pará | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| County | Belém | ||||
| Mayor | Duciomar Gomes da Costa | ||||
| Area | |||||
| - City | 1.070 km² | ||||
| - Land | 1,214.9 km² (469.1 sq mi) | ||||
| - Water | 75.7 km² (29.2 sq mi) 5.8% | ||||
| Population | |||||
| - City (2006) | 2.086.906 [Greater Belém (Belém, Ananindeua, Marituba, Santa Bárbara, Benevides)] | ||||
| - Urban | 1.428.368 | ||||
| Website: [1] | |||||
- For other uses, see Belém (disambiguation).
Belém is a city in the northern part of Brazil. It is the capital and also the biggest city of the state of Pará. Its metropolitan area has approximately 2.08 million inhabitants. It is the entrance gate and, together with Manaus, the most important city in the Brazilian amazonic region. It is also known as Cidade das mangueiras (city of the mango trees) due to the amount of those trees found in the city. Belém is served by the International Airport of Val De Cans (BEL) that connects the town to rest of the country and other cities in South America. Brazilians often refer to the city as Belém do Pará ("Belém of Pará") rather than just Belém so as to differentiate it from Belém (Bethlehem) in the West Bank.
[edit] History
The city was founded on January 12, 1616 by capitain Francisco Caldeiras de Castelo Branco, who was sent by the Portuguese crown to defend the region against French, Dutch and British colonisation attempts. For this purpose, he built a fortress called Forte do Presépio (currently called Forte do Castelo).
Initially, the city was named Feliz Lusitânia. Later it was renamed to Santa Maria do Grão Pará as well as Santa Maria de Belém do Grão Pará, finally receiving its current name Belém.
Distanced from the rest of the county and strongly linked to Portugal, Belém accepted Brazil's independency not before August 1823, almost one year after its declaration.
In 1835 it was a town of about 13,000, and extended on a grid pattern for a mere eight or nine blocks from the banks of the Amazon. A small hill overlooking the main harbour was topped by a colonial Portuguese fort and shore batteries.
Between 1835 and 1840 Belém witnessed the Revolta dos Cabanos also known as Cabanagem, a revolt considered as to have the most authentic popular participation in the country's history.
Due to the growing importance of rubber (Hevea brasiliensis) from the end of the 19th until the beginning of the 20th century, Belém became a very important marketplace. During this period many important buildings were constructed, such as Palácio Lauro Sodré, Colégio Gentil Bitencourt, Teatro da Paz, Palácio Antônio Lemos and the Ver-o-Peso market.
[edit] Geography
1° 27' south, 48° 29' west. As of 2004, the population is 1.421 million, which makes it the 10th biggest city of Brazil. The mouth of the Amazon lies just to the north of the city.
[edit] External links
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- Mapping from Multimap or GlobalGuide or Google Maps
- Aerial image from TerraServer
- Satellite image from WikiMapia
| Capitals of Brazilian States | Image:Flag of Brazil.svg |
|---|---|
| Aracaju | Belo Horizonte | Belém | Boa Vista | Brasília | Campo Grande | Cuiabá | Curitiba | Florianópolis | Fortaleza | Goiânia | João Pessoa | Macapá | Maceió | Manaus | Natal | Palmas | Porto Alegre | Porto Velho | Recife | Rio Branco | Rio de Janeiro | Salvador | São Paulo | São Luís | Teresina | Vitória | |
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