Yahoo Web Search

  1. Including results for

    oporto portugal wikipedia

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PortoPorto - Wikipedia

    Porto. A Cidade Invicta ("The Undefeated City"), A Cidade da Virgem ("The City of the Virgin") The Sandwich of Europe. (Vlog usage) /  41.1621417°N 8.6219528°W  / 41.1621417; -8.6219528. Porto ( Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈpoɾtu] ⓘ ), also known as Oporto, [a] is the second largest city in Portugal after Lisbon.

    • Douro

      The Douro (UK: / ˈ d ʊər oʊ, ˈ d ʊər uː /, US: / ˈ d ɔːr uː,...

    • List of Cities in Portugal

      This is a list of cities in Portugal.In Portugal, a city...

  2. Coordenadas: 41° 08' 58"N 8° 36' 39" O Porto Ribeira e Ponte D. Luís I vistos da Serra do Pilar Casa da Música Câmara Municipal Palácio da Bolsa Igreja de Santo Ildefonso Mapa de Porto Gentílico portuense, tripeiro (informal) Área 41,42 km² População 231 962 hab. (2021) Densidade populacional 5 600,2 hab./km² N.º de freguesias 7 Presidente da câmara municipal Rui Moreira (Rui ...

    • 5 600,2 hab./km²
    • 41,42 km²
    • portuense, tripeiro (informal)
    • 231 962 hab. (2021)
    • Overview
    • History
    • The contemporary city

    Porto, city and port, northern Portugal. The city lies along the Douro River, 2 miles (3 km) from the river’s mouth on the Atlantic Ocean and 175 miles (280 km) north of Lisbon. World-famous for its port wine, Porto is Portugal’s second largest city and is the commercial and industrial centre for the zone north of the Mondego River. The historic ce...

    Porto was called Portus Cale in Roman times and was earlier a flourishing settlement on the Douro’s south bank; the nomadic Alani tribe later founded the city of Castrum Novum on the north bank. The Visigoths took possession of the site about 540 ce but yielded in 716 to the Moors. In 997 Christian forces recaptured Porto, which for a time became the capital of the counts of Portucalense (northern Portugal) during Moorish rule in the southern part of the kingdom. The Moors again held the city briefly, but in 1092 it was brought finally under Christian domination. In the 14th century the city became an important port, and Prince Henry the Navigator was born there in 1394. During the Peninsular War, British forces under Arthur Wellesley (later the duke of Wellington) there crossed the Douro, routed the French, and captured the city on May 12, 1809.

    Porto’s cathedral, on the site of the Visigothic citadel, was originally a 12th-century Romanesque building with 14th-century Gothic cloisters, but it was largely rebuilt in the 17th–18th century. The Romanesque and early Gothic Church of São Martinho de Cedofeita, notable for the curiously carved capitals of its pillars, occupies the site of a church said to have been built by Theodomir, king of the Visigoths, in 559 to receive relics of St. Martin from France. Also notable are the Torre dos Clérigos, an 18th-century granite tower, 246 feet (75 metres) high; the Gothic Church of São Francisco (from 1410); and the stock exchange, with its ornately designed Salão Arabe (“Arabic Hall”; 19th century).

    The present-day city lies chiefly on the Douro’s north (right) bank, sprawling outward from the older riverside district known as the Ribeira. The red-tiled warehouses of the town of Vila Nova de Gaia, where vast quantities of port wine are blended and stored, are on the south bank of the Douro; other suburbs include Matosinhos, Leça da Palmeira, and Aguas Santas to the north and Gondomar and Oliveira do Douro to the southeast. The region’s narrow coastal plain quickly rises eastward to an inland undulating plateau. A mild, moist climate and generally fertile soils have encouraged intensive farming in the region, including winter and summer cereals, vegetables, and tree crops (cork oak and olive). Timber and its associated industries and the production of vinho verde (an effervescent wine) are also important.

    Porto is chiefly famous for the export of the wine named for it, a popular fortified wine usually served after meals. The trade in port was begun in 1678 and was firmly established under the terms of the Methuen Treaty (1703) between England and Portugal. An act of 1906 defined port as a wine produced in the Douro district and exported from Porto with an alcoholic strength of more than 16.5 percent. A sizable proportion of the population is engaged in manufacturing, and fisheries and tourism are also important. Just northwest of Porto, on the Atlantic coast in Matosinhos, is the deepwater artificial Port of Leixões.

    Porto has a high population density, and overcrowding is common. Large-scale planning and residential development improved conditions beginning in the latter part of the 20th century. The Douro River is spanned in central Porto by several bridges, notably the Dom Luís I Bridge (591 feet [180 metres]), which was built in 1881–85 from a design by a disciple of the French civil engineer Gustave Eiffel, and the Maria Pia Bridge (1876–77), designed by Eiffel himself. Porto has an international airport and is connected with Lisbon by highway and high-speed rail. The first line of a municipal subway system opened in 2002, and second and third lines began service in 2005. Three more lines were subsequently added. The Crestuma hydroelectric project on the Douro River is located about 19 miles (30 km) from the city.

    Special offer for students! Check out our special academic rate and excel this spring semester!

    Learn More

    An episcopal see, Porto has a university (founded 1911), district archives, museums including the Soares do Reis National Museum (prehistoric and Roman artifacts, sculpture, paintings, and numismatics) and one for contemporary art in a striking Art Deco building, an opera house, a fine-arts school, a symphony orchestra, and several scientific institutes. A concert hall, designed by the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, opened in 2005. Other contemporary public buildings include the county hall, university hospital, and football (soccer) stadium.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The Historic Centre of Oporto, Luiz I Bridge and Monastery of Serra do Pilar, built along the hills overlooking the mouth of the Douro River in northern Portugal, is an outstanding urban landscape with a 2,000-year history. The Romans gave it the name Portus, or port, in the 1st century BC.

  4. The Porto metropolitan area is the second largest metropolitan area of Portugal, with about 1.7 million people. It groups the larger Porto Urban Area, the second largest in the country, assembled by the municipalities of Porto, Matosinhos, Vila Nova de Gaia, Gondomar, Valongo and Maia. It also includes three smaller urban areas: Póvoa de ...

    • 2,040.31 km² (787.77 sq mi)
    • Porto
    • 1,737,395
  5. Porto is Portugal 's second largest city and the capital of the Northern region, and a busy industrial and commercial centre. The city isn't very populous (about 238,000 inhabitants in 2024), but the Porto metropolitan area has some 1.7 million inhabitants in a 50-km radius, with cities like Vila Nova de Gaia, Vila do Conde, Póvoa de Varzim ...

  6. Porto is the second-largest city in Portugal, after Lisbon, and the name “Porto” itself influenced the name of the country “Portugal”. Established by the Celts on the mouth of the Douro River, it was occupied by the Romans during the fourth century, transforming it into an influential commercial port and renaming it “Portus Cale”.

  1. People also search for