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Alagoas

Alagoas (Brazilian Portuguese: [alaˈɡoɐs] ), officially State of Alagoas, is one of the 27 federative units of Brazil and is situated in the eastern part of the Northeast Region. It borders: Pernambuco (N and NW); Sergipe (S); Bahia (SW); and the Atlantic Ocean (E). Its capital is the city of Maceió. It has 1.6% of the Brazilian population and produces 0.8% of the Brazilian GDP. It is made up of 102 municipalities and its most populous cities are Maceió, Arapiraca, Palmeira dos Índios, Rio Largo, Penedo, União dos Palmares, São Miguel dos Campos, Santana do Ipanema, Delmiro Gouveia, Coruripe, and Campo Alegre.

Alagoas
Estado de Alagoas
State of Alagoas
Motto(s): 
Ad bonum et prosperitatem (Latin)
"For which is good and for prosperity"
Anthem: Hino de Alagoas
Coordinates: 9°34′S 36°33′W / 9.57°S 36.55°W / -9.57; -36.55
Country Brazil
FoundedOctober 12, 1943
Capital and largest cityMaceió
Government
 • BodyLegislative Assembly
 • GovernorPaulo Dantas (MDB)
 • Vice GovernorRonaldo Lessa (PDT)
 • SenatorsFernando Farias (MDB)
Renan Calheiros (MDB)
Rodrigo Cunha (UNIÃO)
Area
 • Total27,845.1 km2 (10,751.1 sq mi)
 • Rank25th
Population
 (2007)[1]
 • Total3,120,494
 • Estimate 
(2021)
3,337,357
 • Rank19th
 • Density110/km2 (290/sq mi)
  • Rank4th
DemonymsAlagoano(a) or
Alagoense
GDP
 • TotalR$ 76.266 billion
(US$ 14.147 billion)
HDI
 • Year2021
 • Category0.684[3]medium (26th)
Time zoneUTC-3 (BRT)
Postal Code
57000-000 to 57990-000
ISO 3166 codeBR-AL
License Plate Letter SequenceMUA to MVK, NLV to NMO, OHB to OHK, ORD to ORM, OXN, QLA to QLM, QTT, QWG to QWL, RGO to RGZ
Websitegoverno.al.gov.br

It is the second smallest Brazilian state in area (larger only than Sergipe) and it is 16th in population. It is also one of the largest producers of sugarcane, coconuts, and natural gas in the country. Alagoas also has oil exploration, mostly of onshore deposits.

Land of the sururu (or Charru Mussel), lagoon shellfish which serves as food for the coastal population, and of coconut water, Alagoas also possesses some of the country's richest folklore.

Initially, the territory of Alagoas constituted the southern part of the Captaincy of Pernambuco and only gained its autonomy in 1817. Its occupation pushed the expansion of the captaincy's sugarcane farming, which required new areas of cultivation, southward. Thus arose Porto Calvo, Alagoas (now Marechal Deodoro) and Penedo, nuclei which guided the colonization, economic, and social life of the region for a long time.

The Dutch invasion in Pernambuco was extended to Alagoas in 1631. The invaders were expelled in 1645, after intense fighting in Porto Calvo, leaving the economy in ruins.

The escape of African slaves during the Dutch invasion created a serious labour shortage problem on the sugarcane plantations. Grouped in villages called quilombos, the Africans were only completely dominated at the end of the 17th century with the destruction of the most important quilombo, Palmares.

During the empire, the separatist and republican Confederation of the Equator received the support of noteworthy figures from Alagoas. Throughout the 1840s, political life was marked by the conflict between the lisos (lit. "straights", not the sexual orientation connotation), conservatives, and the cabeludos (lit. "hairies"), liberals.

At the beginning of the 20th century, the region's hinterland lived through the pioneering experience of Delmiro Gouveia, a entrepreneur from Pernambuco who installed the Estrela thread factory, which came to produce 200 spools daily. Delmiro Gouveia was killed in October 1917 in circumstances still unclarified, after being pressured, according to rumor, to sell his factory to competing foreign firms. After his death, his machines would be destroyed and thrown into Paulo Afonso Falls.

Nicknamed the Land of the Marshals (Terra dos Marechais), for being the birthplace of Deodoro da Fonseca and Floriano Peixoto, the first two presidents of Brazil, Alagoas gave the country numerous illustrious Brazilians among whom are the anthropologist Arthur Ramos, the maestro Hekel Tavares, the philologist Aurélio Buarque de Holanda, the musicians Djavan and Hermeto Pascoal the poet Jorge de Lima, the jurists Pontes de Miranda and Marcos Bernardes de Mello, besides the writers Lêdo Ivo and Graciliano Ramos.

Etymology edit

The Latin lacus, "reservoir, lake" is the origin, in the primitive vocabulary heritage, of the Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian lago,[4] French lac,[5] one of its derivatives, the Latin lacuna, "pitfall, hole", "lack, want, neglect", explains the Spanish and Italian laguna.[6][7] But the Portuguese lagoa,[4] coincidentally with the Spanish lagona and Mirandese llagona, suggests a change in suffix,[8] already documented in a 938 document from Valencia, under the spelling lacona,[4] and in another from 1094, in Sahagún, under the spelling lagona.[4]

The Portuguese lagoa under the spelling lagona (perhaps lagõna), is documented in the 14th century,[4] and alternated with the other for a long time; the prosthesis is then explained by the introduction of the article, chiefly in locution (na lagoa, vindo da lagoa) (in the lake, coming from the lake),[4] and for morphologic regularization with the derivatives of the verb alagar (to inundate) (alagadiço, alagado, alagador, alagamento, etc.) (swampish, waterlogged, flooding, overflow, etc.).[4]

The name appears as a competitor with the names of the lagoons of Manguaba, a lagoa do sul ("the southern lagoon"), and Mundaú, a lagoa do norte ("the northern lagoon"), already in the 16th century, when settlements were founded near the Alagoa do Norte and the Alagoa do Sul, the Alagoas, with the inclusion of the rest of the lagoons in the area.[9]

The suffix -ano is characteristic of Brazil: paraibano, pernambucano, alagoano, sergipano, baiano, goiano, and later acriano.[4]

Geography edit

 
Summer in Maceió.

The state's name originates with the lakes along its coast near the city of Maceió. The coast is bordered by fringing reefs and many fine beaches. Behind the beaches, sometimes only hundreds of meters and defined by steep scarps, lies a stretch of green coastal hills having enough rainfall for considerable agriculture and scarce remnants of the Atlantic Forest that now is largely limited to steep hill tops or steep valley sides and bottoms. This is the area long dominated by sugar cane.

Still farther inland lies the Sertão of the Northeast region of the nation. The Sertão is a high dry region dominated by scrub that is often thorn-filled and sometimes toxic, the caatinga. This area and its people are famed in legend and song. It is the land of the cowboy who is clad from head to toe (if he is lucky) with very thick leather to avoid the sharp vegetation.

History edit

 
Convent of Santa Maria, Marechal Deodoro.

During the first three centuries of its history, Alagoas was part of the captaincy of Pernambuco, only becoming an independent captaincy in 1817. As a reprisal against the Pernambuco Revolution, the King John VI of Portugal ordered a vast portion of the territory of Pernambuco to be taken from it, most including its southern portion, one part was given to the captaincy of Bahia, the other portion was made independent, creating Alagoas as a new Brazilian captaincy.

Initially, in the first years of the 16th century, Alagoas settlement went on slowly, however helped by Africans turned into slaves whose work urged the local economy. In the period of the 16th and 17th centuries, French pirates invaded its territory attracted by the commerce of brazilwood.

Some time later, Duarte Coelho, owner of the captaincy of Pernambuco, gave the control of the region back to the Portuguese, running the territory as part of his captaincy. He increased the number of sugar cane plantations and built some sugar mills, as well as founding the cities of Penedo and Alagoas – this last one originally baptized by Portuguese as Santa Maria Madalena da Alagoa do Sul (Saint Mary Magdalene of the Southern Lake), currently the historic heritage town of Deodoro da Fonseca.

In 1570, a second expedition ordered by Duarte Coelho and led by Cristóvão Lins, explored the north of Alagoas and founded the settlement of Porto Calvo and five sugar mills, which two of them still endure, Buenos Aires and Escurial.

In 1630, the territory was taken by the Dutch, whose interest was to manage the commerce of sugarcane in most parts of the northeastern region of Brazil. As part of one of the wealthiest Brazilian captaincies, Alagoas prospered along with the sugar trade. They built Fort Maurits in Penedo, on the river São Francisco. However, the Dutch colonizers abandoned the territory after being defeated in 1646.

Decades before Alagoas was formed in 1817, its sugar industry had 200 mills, and agriculture also involved cotton, tobacco and corn plantations. With Brazilian independence from Portugal in 1822, Alagoas became a province. In 1839, the capital of the province was changed definitively from the town of Alagoas to Maceió, mainly due to the increasing growth of the city because of its port.

Demographics edit

 
Pajuçara Beach in Maceió.

According to the IBGE of 2008, there were 3,173,000 people residing in the state. The population density was 109.9 inhabitants/km2.

Urbanization: 67.4% (2006); Population growth: 1.3% (1991–2000); Houses: 779,000 (2006).[10]

The 2022 census revealed the following numbers: 1,887,865 Brown (Multiracial) people (60.4%), 915,400 White people (29.3%), 298,709 Black people (9.6%), 20,095 Amerindian people (0.6%), 5,505 Asian people (0.2%).[11]

According to a genetic study from 2013, Brazilians in Alagoas have 53.7% European, 26.6% African and 18.7% Amerindian ancestries, respectively.[12]

Largest cities edit

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Alagoas
Rank Mesoregion Pop. Rank Mesoregion Pop.
 
Maceió
 
Arapiraca
1 Maceió Leste 1.116.000 11 Marechal Deodoro Leste 43.753  
Palmeira dos Índios
2 Arapiraca Agreste 220.000 12 Coruripe Leste 45.197
3 Palmeira dos Índios Agreste 70.556 13 Atalaia Leste 44.611
4 Rio Largo Leste 68.885 14 Teotônio Vilela Leste 41.480
5 União dos Palmares Leste 62.645 15 Girau do Ponciano Agreste 37.118
6 Penedo Leste 60.638 16 Pilar Leste 33.466
7 São Miguel dos Campos Leste 55.462 17 São Luís do Quitunde Leste 32.632
8 Santana do Ipanema Sertão 52.716 18 São Sebastião Agreste 32.232
9 Campo Alegre Leste 51.584 19 São José da Tapera Sertão 30.322
10 Delmiro Gouveia Sertão 48.492 20 Maragogi Leste 29.280

Statistics edit

Education edit

 
Federal University of Alagoas in Maceió.

Portuguese is the official national language, and thus the primary language taught in schools. But English and Spanish are part of the official high school curriculum.

Educational institutions edit

  • Universidade Federal de Alagoas (UFAL) (Federal University of Alagoas);
  • Universidade Estadual de Alagoas (Uneal) (State University of Alagoas);
  • Universidade de Ciências da Saúde de Alagoas (Uncisal) (University of Sciences of the Health of Alagoas);
  • Instituto Federal de Alagoas (IFAL);
  • Centro de Ensino Superior de Maceió (CESMAC) (Center of Higher Education of Maceió);
  • Faculdade de Alagoas (FAL) (College of Alagoas);
  • and many others.

Economy edit

 
Subsistence fishing is common in the region
 
Sugarcane seedlings in the interior of the state

Alagoas is one of the poorest states of Brazil. It has the second worst HDI in the country, ahead only of the state of Maranhão, though its indicators have improved in recent years.[15][16] The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 55.8%, followed by the industrial sector at 36.9%. Agriculture represents 7.3% of the state's GDP (2004). Alagoas exports consist of: sugar 58.8%, alcohol 29.4%, chemicals 9%, tobacco 2.1% (2002).

The economy has been agricultural, dependent largely on large sugarcane plantations with some tobacco farming that is concentrated around the city of Arapiraca. Sugar cane formed the basis for an alcohol industry that is in decline. Small to medium-sized tanker ships took alcohol on board in Maceio's port with considerable frequency during the peak period. Such loads still take place with less frequency. Another local industry is based on chemical products from brine pumped from deep wells on the outskirts of Maceió.

In the last twenty years the tourist industry has found the beaches and Maceió itself has changed from a rather sleepy little port with coconut palm plantations along its beaches to high-rise hotels. The northern coast, particularly around the towns Maragogi and Japaratinga is beginning to see some of this development in the form of resorts attracting people from the south and from Europe. There is considerable European investment (as of 2007) in beach property north of Maceió with walled compounds of beach homes.

Infrastructure edit

International Airport edit

Alagoas gained a new airport complex, Zumbi dos Palmares International Airport, in the Maceió Metropolitan Area, designed by homegrown architect Mário Aloísio, which combines glass, metal and granite. It includes space for art exhibitions, a panoramic deck, chapel, seven escalators, nine elevators and four boarding bridges. The whole terminal was designed to permit access by the physically disabled, with ramps and special bathroom fixtures.[citation needed]

In the new terminal, Infraero also brings to Maceió "Aeroshopping" – a concept that is transforming the country's airports into centers for leisure and high-quality products and services. The entire building has a computerized air conditioning, with commercial spaces that will be occupied gradually. The parking area was more than tripled. Demand will be able to grow to 1.2 million passengers a year since the new passenger terminal has 24,000 square meters, the triple of its former size. The check-in counters were doubled and can reach higher numbers without any structural remodeling. The building is "intelligent", meaning controlled by a computerized system that regulates factors ranging from the lighting level to air temperature and even the speed of the escalators. This system also controls access to restricted areas and the fire protection system, among others.[citation needed]

 
Mundaú Lake.

Highways edit

Port edit

The Port of Jaraguá is located in Maceió. The commercial and economic development of the Port of Jaraguá, on the margins of the Mundaú lagoon, was responsible for the emergence of an important settlement that received the name of Maceió and later became the present capital of Alagoas. The Port of Jaraguá is situated in a natural port area that facilitates the ships docking. During the colonial period, the most important products exported through the port were sugar, tobacco, coconut and spices.[citation needed]

Sports edit

 
Estádio Rei Pelé in Maceió.

Alagoas provides visitors and residents with various sport activities. There are several football clubs based in the state, such as ASA de Arapiraca, CRB, CSA, Murici, Coruripe, CSE, Santa Rita, Penedense and Ipanema.

Maceió was one of the 18 candidates to host games of the 2014 FIFA World Cup, for which Brazil was the selected host, but it did not make the final cut.

Notable people edit

Flag edit

The coat of arms symbolizes the first Alagoan settlement of Porto Calvo. Some plantations, sugarcane, and cotton that provided wealth in the past are incorporated in the design. The colors red, white, and blue refer to the French Tricolore, symbolizing the ideals of the French Revolution (liberté, égalité, fraternité), while the five-pointed star refers to the coat of arms of Brazil.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Estimativas populacionais para os municípios brasileiros em 01.07.2012 2014-07-22 at the Wayback Machine (in Portuguese)
  2. ^ "PIB por Unidade da Federação, 2021". ibge.gov.br.
  3. ^ "Atlas do Desenvolvimento Humano no Brasil. Pnud Brasil, Ipea e FJP, 2022". www.atlasbrasil.org.br. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h ANDRADE, Fernando Moretzsohn de; GUIMARÃES, André Passos. ALAGOAS. In: Enciclopédia Mirador Internacional. São Paulo: Encyclopædia Britannica do Brasil Publicações, 1993. v. 2, p. 258.
  5. ^ Verbete "Lac" 2011-08-18 at the Wayback Machine Linternaute.com. Page visited on August 16, 2011.
  6. ^ Entry "Laguna" 2011-06-08 at the Wayback Machine Diccionario de la Lengua Española. Page visited on August 16, 2011.
  7. ^ Entry "Laguna" 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. Dizionario Italiano. Page visited on August 16, 2011.
  8. ^ Entry "Lhagona" 2011-07-14 at the Wayback Machine Dicionário da Língua Mirandesa. Page visited on August 16, 2011.
  9. ^ Why Alagoas? Archived 2012-08-02 at archive.today Official site of the Civil Cabinet of the State of Alagoas. Pageg visited on August 16, 2011.
  10. ^ Source: PNAD.
  11. ^ "Censo 2022 - Panorama".
  12. ^ Saloum De Neves Manta, Fernanda; Pereira, Rui; Vianna, Romulo; Rodolfo Beuttenmüller De Araújo, Alfredo; Leite Góes Gitaí, Daniel; Aparecida Da Silva, Dayse; De Vargas Wolfgramm, Eldamária; Da Mota Pontes, Isabel; Ivan Aguiar, José; Ozório Moraes, Milton; Fagundes De Carvalho, Elizeu; Gusmão, Leonor (2013). "Revisiting the Genetic Ancestry of Brazilians Using Autosomal AIM-Indels". PLOS ONE. 8 (9): e75145. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...875145S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075145. PMC 3779230. PMID 24073242.
  13. ^ "Estimativa de 2009 do Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística". Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics. 30 March 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2010.
  14. ^ Source: IBGE.
  15. ^ a b "Always with us". The Economist. 2011-06-09. from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  16. ^ "Subnational HDI (v7.0)". Global Data Lab. Retrieved 19 May 2023.

External links edit

  • (in Portuguese) Official Website
  • (in English)
  • (in Portuguese)
  • (in Portuguese)
  • (in Portuguese)
  • (in English)

alagoas, other, uses, disambiguation, brazilian, portuguese, alaˈɡoɐs, officially, state, federative, units, brazil, situated, eastern, part, northeast, region, borders, pernambuco, sergipe, bahia, atlantic, ocean, capital, city, maceió, brazilian, population,. For other uses see Alagoas disambiguation Alagoas Brazilian Portuguese alaˈɡoɐs officially State of Alagoas is one of the 27 federative units of Brazil and is situated in the eastern part of the Northeast Region It borders Pernambuco N and NW Sergipe S Bahia SW and the Atlantic Ocean E Its capital is the city of Maceio It has 1 6 of the Brazilian population and produces 0 8 of the Brazilian GDP It is made up of 102 municipalities and its most populous cities are Maceio Arapiraca Palmeira dos Indios Rio Largo Penedo Uniao dos Palmares Sao Miguel dos Campos Santana do Ipanema Delmiro Gouveia Coruripe and Campo Alegre AlagoasStateEstado de AlagoasState of AlagoasFlagCoat of armsMotto s Ad bonum et prosperitatem Latin For which is good and for prosperity Anthem Hino de AlagoasCoordinates 9 34 S 36 33 W 9 57 S 36 55 W 9 57 36 55Country BrazilFoundedOctober 12 1943Capital and largest cityMaceioGovernment BodyLegislative Assembly GovernorPaulo Dantas MDB Vice GovernorRonaldo Lessa PDT SenatorsFernando Farias MDB Renan Calheiros MDB Rodrigo Cunha UNIAO Area Total27 845 1 km2 10 751 1 sq mi Rank25thPopulation 2007 1 Total3 120 494 Estimate 2021 3 337 357 Rank19th Density110 km2 290 sq mi Rank4thDemonymsAlagoano a or AlagoenseGDP 2 TotalR 76 266 billion US 14 147 billion HDI Year2021 Category0 684 3 medium 26th Time zoneUTC 3 BRT Postal Code57000 000 to 57990 000ISO 3166 codeBR ALLicense Plate Letter SequenceMUA to MVK NLV to NMO OHB to OHK ORD to ORM OXN QLA to QLM QTT QWG to QWL RGO to RGZWebsitegoverno al gov br It is the second smallest Brazilian state in area larger only than Sergipe and it is 16th in population It is also one of the largest producers of sugarcane coconuts and natural gas in the country Alagoas also has oil exploration mostly of onshore deposits Land of the sururu or Charru Mussel lagoon shellfish which serves as food for the coastal population and of coconut water Alagoas also possesses some of the country s richest folklore Initially the territory of Alagoas constituted the southern part of the Captaincy of Pernambuco and only gained its autonomy in 1817 Its occupation pushed the expansion of the captaincy s sugarcane farming which required new areas of cultivation southward Thus arose Porto Calvo Alagoas now Marechal Deodoro and Penedo nuclei which guided the colonization economic and social life of the region for a long time The Dutch invasion in Pernambuco was extended to Alagoas in 1631 The invaders were expelled in 1645 after intense fighting in Porto Calvo leaving the economy in ruins The escape of African slaves during the Dutch invasion created a serious labour shortage problem on the sugarcane plantations Grouped in villages called quilombos the Africans were only completely dominated at the end of the 17th century with the destruction of the most important quilombo Palmares During the empire the separatist and republican Confederation of the Equator received the support of noteworthy figures from Alagoas Throughout the 1840s political life was marked by the conflict between the lisos lit straights not the sexual orientation connotation conservatives and the cabeludos lit hairies liberals At the beginning of the 20th century the region s hinterland lived through the pioneering experience of Delmiro Gouveia a entrepreneur from Pernambuco who installed the Estrela thread factory which came to produce 200 spools daily Delmiro Gouveia was killed in October 1917 in circumstances still unclarified after being pressured according to rumor to sell his factory to competing foreign firms After his death his machines would be destroyed and thrown into Paulo Afonso Falls Nicknamed the Land of the Marshals Terra dos Marechais for being the birthplace of Deodoro da Fonseca and Floriano Peixoto the first two presidents of Brazil Alagoas gave the country numerous illustrious Brazilians among whom are the anthropologist Arthur Ramos the maestro Hekel Tavares the philologist Aurelio Buarque de Holanda the musicians Djavan and Hermeto Pascoal the poet Jorge de Lima the jurists Pontes de Miranda and Marcos Bernardes de Mello besides the writers Ledo Ivo and Graciliano Ramos Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 3 History 4 Demographics 4 1 Largest cities 4 2 Statistics 4 3 Education 4 3 1 Educational institutions 5 Economy 6 Infrastructure 6 1 International Airport 6 2 Highways 6 3 Port 7 Sports 8 Notable people 9 Flag 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksEtymology editThe Latin lacus reservoir lake is the origin in the primitive vocabulary heritage of the Portuguese Spanish and Italian lago 4 French lac 5 one of its derivatives the Latin lacuna pitfall hole lack want neglect explains the Spanish and Italian laguna 6 7 But the Portuguese lagoa 4 coincidentally with the Spanish lagona and Mirandese llagona suggests a change in suffix 8 already documented in a 938 document from Valencia under the spelling lacona 4 and in another from 1094 in Sahagun under the spelling lagona 4 The Portuguese lagoa under the spelling lagona perhaps lagona is documented in the 14th century 4 and alternated with the other for a long time the prosthesis is then explained by the introduction of the article chiefly in locution na lagoa vindo da lagoa in the lake coming from the lake 4 and for morphologic regularization with the derivatives of the verb alagar to inundate alagadico alagado alagador alagamento etc swampish waterlogged flooding overflow etc 4 The name appears as a competitor with the names of the lagoons of Manguaba a lagoa do sul the southern lagoon and Mundau a lagoa do norte the northern lagoon already in the 16th century when settlements were founded near the Alagoa do Norte and the Alagoa do Sul the Alagoas with the inclusion of the rest of the lagoons in the area 9 The suffix ano is characteristic of Brazil paraibano pernambucano alagoano sergipano baiano goiano and later acriano 4 Geography edit nbsp Summer in Maceio The state s name originates with the lakes along its coast near the city of Maceio The coast is bordered by fringing reefs and many fine beaches Behind the beaches sometimes only hundreds of meters and defined by steep scarps lies a stretch of green coastal hills having enough rainfall for considerable agriculture and scarce remnants of the Atlantic Forest that now is largely limited to steep hill tops or steep valley sides and bottoms This is the area long dominated by sugar cane Still farther inland lies the Sertao of the Northeast region of the nation The Sertao is a high dry region dominated by scrub that is often thorn filled and sometimes toxic the caatinga This area and its people are famed in legend and song It is the land of the cowboy who is clad from head to toe if he is lucky with very thick leather to avoid the sharp vegetation History editMain article History of Alagoas nbsp Convent of Santa Maria Marechal Deodoro During the first three centuries of its history Alagoas was part of the captaincy of Pernambuco only becoming an independent captaincy in 1817 As a reprisal against the Pernambuco Revolution the King John VI of Portugal ordered a vast portion of the territory of Pernambuco to be taken from it most including its southern portion one part was given to the captaincy of Bahia the other portion was made independent creating Alagoas as a new Brazilian captaincy Initially in the first years of the 16th century Alagoas settlement went on slowly however helped by Africans turned into slaves whose work urged the local economy In the period of the 16th and 17th centuries French pirates invaded its territory attracted by the commerce of brazilwood Some time later Duarte Coelho owner of the captaincy of Pernambuco gave the control of the region back to the Portuguese running the territory as part of his captaincy He increased the number of sugar cane plantations and built some sugar mills as well as founding the cities of Penedo and Alagoas this last one originally baptized by Portuguese as Santa Maria Madalena da Alagoa do Sul Saint Mary Magdalene of the Southern Lake currently the historic heritage town of Deodoro da Fonseca In 1570 a second expedition ordered by Duarte Coelho and led by Cristovao Lins explored the north of Alagoas and founded the settlement of Porto Calvo and five sugar mills which two of them still endure Buenos Aires and Escurial In 1630 the territory was taken by the Dutch whose interest was to manage the commerce of sugarcane in most parts of the northeastern region of Brazil As part of one of the wealthiest Brazilian captaincies Alagoas prospered along with the sugar trade They built Fort Maurits in Penedo on the river Sao Francisco However the Dutch colonizers abandoned the territory after being defeated in 1646 Decades before Alagoas was formed in 1817 its sugar industry had 200 mills and agriculture also involved cotton tobacco and corn plantations With Brazilian independence from Portugal in 1822 Alagoas became a province In 1839 the capital of the province was changed definitively from the town of Alagoas to Maceio mainly due to the increasing growth of the city because of its port Demographics edit nbsp Pajucara Beach in Maceio See also Largest Cities of Northeast Region Brazil According to the IBGE of 2008 there were 3 173 000 people residing in the state The population density was 109 9 inhabitants km2 Urbanization 67 4 2006 Population growth 1 3 1991 2000 Houses 779 000 2006 10 The 2022 census revealed the following numbers 1 887 865 Brown Multiracial people 60 4 915 400 White people 29 3 298 709 Black people 9 6 20 095 Amerindian people 0 6 5 505 Asian people 0 2 11 According to a genetic study from 2013 Brazilians in Alagoas have 53 7 European 26 6 African and 18 7 Amerindian ancestries respectively 12 Largest cities edit Largest cities or towns in Alagoas 2010 census by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 13 Rank Mesoregion Pop Rank Mesoregion Pop nbsp Maceio nbsp Arapiraca 1 Maceio Leste 1 116 000 11 Marechal Deodoro Leste 43 753 nbsp Palmeira dos Indios 2 Arapiraca Agreste 220 000 12 Coruripe Leste 45 197 3 Palmeira dos Indios Agreste 70 556 13 Atalaia Leste 44 611 4 Rio Largo Leste 68 885 14 Teotonio Vilela Leste 41 480 5 Uniao dos Palmares Leste 62 645 15 Girau do Ponciano Agreste 37 118 6 Penedo Leste 60 638 16 Pilar Leste 33 466 7 Sao Miguel dos Campos Leste 55 462 17 Sao Luis do Quitunde Leste 32 632 8 Santana do Ipanema Sertao 52 716 18 Sao Sebastiao Agreste 32 232 9 Campo Alegre Leste 51 584 19 Sao Jose da Tapera Sertao 30 322 10 Delmiro Gouveia Sertao 48 492 20 Maragogi Leste 29 280 Statistics edit Vehicles 287 018 March 2007 Mobile phones 1 4 million April 2007 Telephones 302 000 April 2007 Cities 102 2007 14 Homicides 60 per 100 000 inhabitants 15 Education edit nbsp Federal University of Alagoas in Maceio Portuguese is the official national language and thus the primary language taught in schools But English and Spanish are part of the official high school curriculum Educational institutions edit Universidade Federal de Alagoas UFAL Federal University of Alagoas Universidade Estadual de Alagoas Uneal State University of Alagoas Universidade de Ciencias da Saude de Alagoas Uncisal University of Sciences of the Health of Alagoas Instituto Federal de Alagoas IFAL Centro de Ensino Superior de Maceio CESMAC Center of Higher Education of Maceio Faculdade de Alagoas FAL College of Alagoas and many others Economy edit nbsp Subsistence fishing is common in the region nbsp Sugarcane seedlings in the interior of the state Alagoas is one of the poorest states of Brazil It has the second worst HDI in the country ahead only of the state of Maranhao though its indicators have improved in recent years 15 16 The service sector is the largest component of GDP at 55 8 followed by the industrial sector at 36 9 Agriculture represents 7 3 of the state s GDP 2004 Alagoas exports consist of sugar 58 8 alcohol 29 4 chemicals 9 tobacco 2 1 2002 The economy has been agricultural dependent largely on large sugarcane plantations with some tobacco farming that is concentrated around the city of Arapiraca Sugar cane formed the basis for an alcohol industry that is in decline Small to medium sized tanker ships took alcohol on board in Maceio s port with considerable frequency during the peak period Such loads still take place with less frequency Another local industry is based on chemical products from brine pumped from deep wells on the outskirts of Maceio In the last twenty years the tourist industry has found the beaches and Maceio itself has changed from a rather sleepy little port with coconut palm plantations along its beaches to high rise hotels The northern coast particularly around the towns Maragogi and Japaratinga is beginning to see some of this development in the form of resorts attracting people from the south and from Europe There is considerable European investment as of 2007 in beach property north of Maceio with walled compounds of beach homes Infrastructure editInternational Airport edit Alagoas gained a new airport complex Zumbi dos Palmares International Airport in the Maceio Metropolitan Area designed by homegrown architect Mario Aloisio which combines glass metal and granite It includes space for art exhibitions a panoramic deck chapel seven escalators nine elevators and four boarding bridges The whole terminal was designed to permit access by the physically disabled with ramps and special bathroom fixtures citation needed In the new terminal Infraero also brings to Maceio Aeroshopping a concept that is transforming the country s airports into centers for leisure and high quality products and services The entire building has a computerized air conditioning with commercial spaces that will be occupied gradually The parking area was more than tripled Demand will be able to grow to 1 2 million passengers a year since the new passenger terminal has 24 000 square meters the triple of its former size The check in counters were doubled and can reach higher numbers without any structural remodeling The building is intelligent meaning controlled by a computerized system that regulates factors ranging from the lighting level to air temperature and even the speed of the escalators This system also controls access to restricted areas and the fire protection system among others citation needed nbsp Mundau Lake Highways edit BR 101 BR 104 BR 110 BR 316 BR 423 BR 424 Port edit The Port of Jaragua is located in Maceio The commercial and economic development of the Port of Jaragua on the margins of the Mundau lagoon was responsible for the emergence of an important settlement that received the name of Maceio and later became the present capital of Alagoas The Port of Jaragua is situated in a natural port area that facilitates the ships docking During the colonial period the most important products exported through the port were sugar tobacco coconut and spices citation needed Sports edit nbsp Estadio Rei Pele in Maceio Alagoas provides visitors and residents with various sport activities There are several football clubs based in the state such as ASA de Arapiraca CRB CSA Murici Coruripe CSE Santa Rita Penedense and Ipanema Maceio was one of the 18 candidates to host games of the 2014 FIFA World Cup for which Brazil was the selected host but it did not make the final cut Notable people editMain article List of people from Alagoas Bruno de Barros Brazilian sprinter Olympic medallist Mauricio Borges Brazilian volleyball player Olympic champion Floriano Peixoto second president of the Brazilian republic Tiago Fernandes former Brazilian tennis player champion of the 2010 Australian Open at Boys Singles Zagallo Mario Jorge Lobo Zagallo football coach Maria Eduarda Arakaki considered the best Brazilian rhythmic gymnast of all time Yohansson Nascimento athlete paralympic champion Kepler Laveran Lima Ferreira aka Pepe footballer Adriano Gabiru football player winner of the 2006 FIFA Club World Cup playing for Sport Club Internacional Roberto Firmino footballer Roberval Davino football coach Sandra Suruagy volleyball player Olympic medallist Deodoro da Fonseca 1827 1892 First president of Federative Republic of Brazil 1889 1891 Bruna Tenorio Top Model Flag editSee also Flag of Alagoas The coat of arms symbolizes the first Alagoan settlement of Porto Calvo Some plantations sugarcane and cotton that provided wealth in the past are incorporated in the design The colors red white and blue refer to the French Tricolore symbolizing the ideals of the French Revolution liberte egalite fraternite while the five pointed star refers to the coat of arms of Brazil See also editList of municipalities in Alagoas List of governors of AlagoasReferences edit Estimativas populacionais para os municipios brasileiros em 01 07 2012 Archived 2014 07 22 at the Wayback Machine in Portuguese PIB por Unidade da Federacao 2021 ibge gov br Atlas do Desenvolvimento Humano no Brasil Pnud Brasil Ipea e FJP 2022 www atlasbrasil org br Retrieved 2023 06 11 a b c d e f g h ANDRADE Fernando Moretzsohn de GUIMARAES Andre Passos ALAGOAS In Enciclopedia Mirador Internacional Sao Paulo Encyclopaedia Britannica do Brasil Publicacoes 1993 v 2 p 258 Verbete Lac Archived 2011 08 18 at the Wayback Machine Linternaute com Page visited on August 16 2011 Entry Laguna Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Diccionario de la Lengua Espanola Page visited on August 16 2011 Entry Laguna Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Dizionario Italiano Page visited on August 16 2011 Entry Lhagona Archived 2011 07 14 at the Wayback Machine Dicionario da Lingua Mirandesa Page visited on August 16 2011 Why Alagoas Archived 2012 08 02 at archive today Official site of the Civil Cabinet of the State of Alagoas Pageg visited on August 16 2011 Source PNAD Censo 2022 Panorama Saloum De Neves Manta Fernanda Pereira Rui Vianna Romulo Rodolfo Beuttenmuller De Araujo Alfredo Leite Goes Gitai Daniel Aparecida Da Silva Dayse De Vargas Wolfgramm Eldamaria Da Mota Pontes Isabel Ivan Aguiar Jose Ozorio Moraes Milton Fagundes De Carvalho Elizeu Gusmao Leonor 2013 Revisiting the Genetic Ancestry of Brazilians Using Autosomal AIM Indels PLOS ONE 8 9 e75145 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 875145S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0075145 PMC 3779230 PMID 24073242 Estimativa de 2009 do Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics 30 March 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Source IBGE a b Always with us The Economist 2011 06 09 Archived from the original on 8 November 2017 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Subnational HDI v7 0 Global Data Lab Retrieved 19 May 2023 External links editAlagoas at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage in Portuguese Official Website in English Brazilian Tourism Portal in Portuguese Visit Alagoas in Portuguese Guide of Alagoas in Portuguese Ministry of Transport port data including main products exported in English Brazilian Embassy in London Sao Francisco River Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alagoas amp oldid 1219480057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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