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Encyclopedia > Cities of Portugal

A cidade is a city in Portugal. It does not necessarily correspond to a concelho (municipality), since cidade is a purely honorifical term, which lost importance with the proliferation since the 1980's (to the extent that Sintra has consistently refused the promotion from vila to city, despite being one of largest urban areas in the country). There are 141 cities in Portugal.


Eight cities have been always considered cities since Portugal became an independent kingdom (although some of them didn't become part of Portugal until later): Braga, Coimbra, Évora, Lamego, Lisbon, Porto, Silves, and Viseu.


Until 1910, a city was proclaimed by royal charter, which happened 25 times. During the First Portuguese Republic (1910-1926), three cities were proclaimed by Parliament. The Estado Novo proclaimed seven cities by government decree, but after the Carnation revolution, proclamation of cities returned to Parliament, which had been plentifully done.


List

Alphabetically, the 141 cities (with the dates when they were declared cities, if before 1996) are:


Source: Instituto Nacional de Estatística (plus research via Google Answers)

See Also

External Links

  • Portuguese City Hangman (http://www.instituto-camoes.pt/cvc/jogoemlinha/forca/cidportuguesas.html) (for some reason, they treat capital and accented letters separately, making the game more difficult)



  Results from FactBites:
 
Portugal - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (8443 words)
Portugal is bordered by Spain to the north and east and by the Atlantic Ocean to the west and south.
Portugal traces its emergence as a nation to 24 June 1128, with the Battle of São Mamede by Afonso I.
Portugal developed an increasingly service-based economy and it was one of the eleven founding countries of the Euro in 1999, with very restrictive criteria, and began circulating the new currency on January 1, 2002 along with twelve other EU members.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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