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PORTUGAL : General
Information
size="2 Portugal
is the country
lying along the Atlantic coast of the
Iberian
Peninsula
in south
western Europe. It is bordered on the East and North by
Spain, and on the
West and South by the
Atlantic
Ocean. In addition
it includes several island territories in the
Atlantic, such as
the
Azores
(Açores)
and
Madeira
and Porto
Santo (including the
Savage
Islands
The natural
advantages of a sunny country with such diverse geographic features
have turned Portugal into a chosen destination for many
holidaymakers, an ideal place for practicing water sports and
playing golf, offering modern tourism facilities, and quaint and
personalized means of accommodation, such as turismo de habitação
(privately owned homes ranging from wonderful farmhouses to manor
houses), hotéis de charme or pousadas.
Portugal
is a country
with a rich history of seafaring and discovery. When it handed over
its last overseas territory,
Macau, to Chinese
administration in 1999, it brought to an end a long and sometimes
turbulent era as a colonial power. Until the 1970s, Portuguese
overseas territories included the
Cape
Verde
Islands, São Tomé and
Príncipe, Portuguese Guinea,
Angola
and
Mozambique
(all in
Africa),
Macau
(in
Asia) and
Timor
(in
Oceania).
For almost half of the 20th
century
Portugal
was a
dictatorship in which for decades Antonio de Oliveira Salazar was
the key figure. The dictatorship's stubborn refusal to relinquish
its grip on the former colonies as demands for independence gained
momentum there resulted in expensive wars in
Africa. This period
was brought to an end in 1974 in a bloodless coup, picturesquely
known as the Revolution of the Carnations, which ushered in a new
democracy. As a member of the European Community and NATO (North
Atlantic Treaty Organization),
Portugal
plays a
greater role in both European and world affairs than its size would
suggest.
Portugal
currently
enjoys a steady economic growth. For centuries
Portugal
has kept the
greatest treasure of a renowned reputation for hospitality that
makes the country a haven of congeniality and safety.
It is a fairly
homogeneous country, both linguistically and religiously.
Ethnically, the Portuguese people form a combination of several
ethnicities: pre-Roman Iberian and Celtic tribes with Romans and
Germanic tribes. Moors became a reduced influence, as essentialy
they were expelled during the Reconquista.
Portugal's biggest
metropolitan agglomerations are
Lisbon,
Porto,
Braga, Aveiro,
and
Coimbra.
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