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Lisbon
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Lisbon
Lisbon , Port. Lisboa, ancient Olisipo, city (1991 pop. 677,790), W Portugal, capital of Portugal and of Lisboa dist., on the Tagus River where it broadens to enter the Atlantic Ocean. Lisbon is Portugal's largest city and its cultural, administrative, commercial, and industrial hub. It has one of the best harbors in Europe, handling a large trade, and it has become a major cruise port. Agricultural and forest products and fish are exported. The city's industries include the production of textiles, chemicals, and steel; oil and sugar refining; and shipbuilding. A large transient and tourist trade is drawn to Lisbon, which is set on seven terraced hills.
The Castelo de São Jorge, a fort that dominates the city, may have been built by the Romans on the site of the citadel of the early inhabitants, who traded with Phoenician and Carthaginian navigators. The Romans occupied the town in 205 BC It was conquered by the Moors in 714. The city's true importance dates, however, from 1147, when King Alfonso I , with the help of Crusaders, drove out the Moors. Alfonso III transferred (c.1260) his court there from Coimbra, and the city rose to great prosperity in the 16th cent. with the establishment of Portugal's empire in Africa and India.
Although many of the old buildings were destroyed by earthquakes, particularly the disastrous earthquake of 1755, some of the medieval buildings remain. The old quarter, the picturesque and crowded Alfama, surrounds the 12th-century Romanesque cathedral (rebuilt later). The new quarter, built by the marqués de Pombal after the great earthquake, centers about a large square, the Terreiro do Paço. Some well-known buildings in and near Lisbon are the Renaissance Monastery of São Vicente de Fora, with the tombs of the Braganza kings; the Church of St. Roque, with the fine Chapel of St. John (built by John V in the 18th cent.); and the magnificent monastery at Belém, on the north bank of the Tagus facing the sea, built by Manuel I to commemorate the discovery of the route to India by Vasco da Gama .
The Univ. of Lisbon (founded 1292, but transferred to Coimbra in 1537), was reestablished in Lisbon in 1911, and the Portuguese poet Camões was born in Lisbon. In 1966 the Ponte 25 de Abril (25th of April Bridge), one of the world's longest (3,323 ft/1,013 m) suspension bridges, was completed across the Tagus. A world's fair was held in the city in 1998, and it left Lisbon with a new aquarium, the Oceanarium, and a large park, the Parque das Nações, as well as the 10-mi (17-km) Vasco da Gama bridge, which crosses the Tagus and has a cable-stayed main span.
Bibliography: See D. Wright and P. Swift, Lisbon (1971).
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Capital idea to flee the crowds; Lisbon has all the cosmopolitan glamour and attractions of a major city but without the mass market hordes of tourists. Julie Wheldon discovers she's a fan.(Travel)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 8/4/2001; 700+ words
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One Hundred Years of Lisbon.(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Europe; 12/1/1999; ; 700+ words
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WHAT THEY SAID: LISBON MAYOR DISCUSSES CITY'S FUTURE.(Brief Article)(Interview)
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In the Portuguese Capital of Lisbon, the Homespun Gentility Of Old Europe
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/26/1992; ; 700+ words
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LISBON -- CHAOTIC, CASUAL, CURIOUS
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/13/1991; ; 700+ words
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Lisbon, city of adventurers: travelers visiting the Portuguese capital can indulge in the grand tradition of wanderlust. (Destination: Europe).
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Lisbon: a vibrant capital; history, culture and cutting-edge fashion. (Lisbon).
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TURN TO PORT! Lisbon landmark the Torre de Belem and (inset) lepidoptery for beginners at the city's magical Butterfly Farm.
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A city of surprises ; LISBON: RICHARD JACKSON DISCOVERS HIS NEW FAVOURITE CAPITAL CITY
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Mail; 1/9/2008; 667 words
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Crazy paving capital; Travel Mail Lisbon has the worst road surfaces in Europe- and some of the most vivid street scenes. Matthew Sturgis ventured into a modern European capital that has a hint of the casbah.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 7/3/2002; ; 700+ words
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Lisbon Agreement on NATO Force Levels
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to American Military History
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Lisbon
Book article from: Concise Dictionary of World Place-Names
Lisbon, Portugal, USA Portugal: a region, Lisbon and the Tagus Valley, in Portuguese Lisboa e Vale do Tejo, and a city. Its former names include Olisipo and similar Moorish variations: ak‐Oshbuna/Lishbuna/Ulixbone/Olissibona. It has been suggested...
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Lisbon Agreement on NATO Force Levels
Book article from: The Oxford Essential Dictionary of the U.S. Military
Lisbon Agreement on NATO Force Levels the Lisbon force goals were adopted by the North Atlantic Council in February 1952 in an attempt to augment the conventional forces defending Western Europe after the outbreak of the Korean War . The goals adopted...
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Lisbon
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Lisbon (Lisboa) Capital, largest city, and chief port of Portugal, at the mouth of the River Tagus , on the Atlantic Ocean. An...205 bc. After Teutonic invasions in the 5th century ad , it fell to the Moors in 716. In 1147, the Portuguese reclaimed Lisbon, and in 1260 it became the capital. It declined under ...
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Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon, The
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon, The, a work by H. Fielding , published posthumously 1755. When he set out for Portugal in 1754...hours which ever haunted the author’; he had prepared it for the press before he died in Lisbon in October.
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