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Vila Nova de Foz Côa

Vila Nova de Foz Côa (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈvilɐ ˈnɔvɐ ðɨ ˈfɔʃ ˈkoɐ] ) is a city and a municipality in the district of Guarda, Portugal. The population in 2011 was 7,312,[1] in an area of 398.15 square kilometres (153.73 sq mi).[2] The city population is around 3,300. Main rivers in the municipal territory include the Douro and the Côa.

Vila Nova de Foz Côa
Vila Nova de Foz Côa
Location in Portugal
Coordinates: 41°05′N 7°08′W / 41.08°N 7.14°W / 41.08; -7.14
Country Portugal
RegionNorte
Intermunic. comm.Douro
DistrictGuarda
Parishes14
Government
 • PresidentGustavo Duarte (PSD)
Area
 • Total398.2 km2 (153.7 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)
 • Total7,312
 • Density18/km2 (48/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC±00:00 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+01:00 (WEST)

The municipality includes parts in the Côa Valley Archaeological site, declared by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site, which partially shares with Figueira de Castelo Rodrigo and Pinhel also located in the Guarda district.

The closest railway station is Pocinho, now the eastern terminus of the Douro railway line. This line (in Portuguese: Linha do Douro) has passenger trains services from Pocinho to Tua, Peso da Régua, Livração, Marco de Canaveses, Penafiel, Paredes, Ermesinde (for connections to Braga, Guimarães, Viana do Castelo, Rio Tinto and Porto).

History edit

Vila Nova de Foz Côa received its first charter in 1299, granted by D. Dinis, having been renewed by the same monarch in 1314. In 1514, a new charter was designed by D. Manuel I. In the county there are several monuments, Among which these three national monuments: the castle of Numão, the Pelourinho of Vila Nova de Foz Côa and the Mother Church of the same village, with a Manueline facade. Another important monument in the county is the castle's best castle shale, a Leonese building dating back to the early 13th century, integrated in the region of Riba Côa, which passed into the hands of the Portuguese crown in 1297 by the Treaty of Alcanizes [5]. ].

In its roots, Vila Nova de Foz Côa meets the Palaeolithic man who, with modest artifacts, in the hardness of the schist he has ambitions and projects of his spiritual and material universe, making this sanctuary the largest museum of outdoor rock art, now Heritage of Humanity.

The vestiges of the human occupation, more or less intense, continue through the times castrejos and Romans. The meager witnesses of the Suevi-Visigothic and Arab periods guarantee, however, the continuity of the population nuclei. Contrary to the vicissitudes proper to the frontier lands at these stops, community life proved regular and continuous, beginning in the tenth century.

The royal and seigniorial interest, in the sense of promoting the settlement and development of this region, was confirmed through the granting of charters to the inhabitants of the settlements, giving them legal and administrative importance. In the 19th century, despite having been a scene of disorders, persecutions and fratricidal struggles (the Marçores guerrilla spread terror in the region) that accompanied the implementation of liberalism, the village of Foz Côa took over the leadership of the county, after several constraints that Justified the substitution or absorption of some municipal offices, namely the multiple administrative reforms of the eighteenth century. Nevertheless, the eight pillars that have survived since then, in the area of the present county, testify to the municipal autonomy and are the symbol of the ancestral community life in the Region.

At the end of the parish of Mós do Douro we found traces of ancient occupation in the places of Campanas and Castelo Velho. They will be small fortified settlements of the Bronze Age, to evaluate by the news of finds that arrived at us.

In contrast to what happens in the north-west of Peninsular, in the region of the hot Douro land, the castro civilization has settled not on top of the mountains but on plateaus or small elevations embedded in valleys. Hence, in the first millennium BC, iron men had settled in the zone of the Castle, a place later Romanized and constituted by a small vico, this being evaluated by the area in which the traces of materials of that period predominate. Graves and a funeral inscription (closing with the common acronyms S.T.T.L. - let the earth be light), among other materials, attest to this occupation.

Other places of the term of Mós must have occupied (in the period of Roman occupation or in the Low or High Middle Ages) cases of Aldeia Velha, place of Fontaínhas (often cited as Fontanas).

In 1380, the county of Numão met to appoint its attorney to the courts of Torres Novas. According to the power of attorney, this assignment belonged to João Eanes, from the village of Mós. In the same document, Gonçalo Martins, also of the Mós, also signs as a witness.

In the sixteenth century the parish had a population center of some importance, 52 inhabitants according to the census of 1527, who paid to their abbey a rent of 20,000 réis in the second quarter of the century. Still in the field of ecclesiastical income, it is known that the Bishop charged here the fee of 2,000 reis for parochial confirmation rights.

In the middle of the sixteenth century, the church of the Mós was of the Counts of Marialva, to which belonged the right to appoint the parish priests. Subsequently, a bull of March 14, 1583, allowed the transfer of his possession to the University of Coimbra, leaving their income to revert to the university coffers. It should be recalled that at the time it was common for universities to have their own income, which allowed them to be financially autonomous. The connection to the Coimbrã University is still visible today in numerous epigraphs indicating the limits of university properties.

In monumental terms it is the eighteenth century that is evident, being dated from this period the denominated House of the Fields or Campinhos and the Mother Church. At this time, the Mós already had a population of 317 inhabitants.

The transition from paganism to Christianity must have been made without major clashes since, until the 18th century, the Mother Church (today's cemetery) remained in the same place (Castle). Towards the end of this century, in view of the population growth and expansion of the urban area to the west, the Church was transferred to Largo do Terreiro.

Like all settlements between the Douro and Côa must have collected Jewish families. A characteristic inscription of "new-Christian vote" is placed on one of the doors of a house on Rua do Castelo.

In the eighteenth century an ennobled family certainly marked the economy of the village, flourishing thanks to the use of Sumagre, the culture of the vine, olive oil and almond. Already on March 24, 1758, the Abbot of Mós, responding to the inquiry sent by the Marquis of Pombal throughout the kingdom, answered: "The fruits of this land which the inhabitants gather with greater abundance are olive oil, wheat bread, rye , Barley, lentils, sumac, wine, almonds, onion, bread and wine is the best. "

From these times came a palatial house, with a coat of arms, known as Solar dos Assecas. It belonged to the first Baron of Foz Côa, Francisco António Campos and was later acquired by the Gaspar family.

It had the parish of Mós do Douro, in its history, men connected to the progressive chains. In the midst of the blossoming of Liberalism, someone who was very convinced of the values of the revolution had the words "Et Pluribus Unum" - 1820 (one by one and all by one) engraved over the door of his house, a phrase that fits well with the motto Of the revolutions of the time, coined with the liberation trilogy based on Liberty - Equality - Fraternity.

The Moors suffered at the beginning of the nineteenth century the entry of the Napoleonic troops, after they had occupied Freixo de Numão on January 26, 1811. The population unable to resist left the village sheltering in the hills near the Janvâo, with the exception of the parish priest P António de Almeida. The fratricidal struggles between liberals and absolutists also did not spare the Mós, who saw the death of the soldier Bernardo António Rolo in the siege of Oporto and later José Polido, assassinated by the partisans of the Marçais.

The population growth between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is certainly due to the Douro railway line, the construction of the Freixo station and the great occupation that was given to the residents of Mós by the Portuguese Railways.

This Parish (in the words of Father Manuel Gonçalves da Costa - "Diocese of Lamego") was never a civil or ecclesiastical center, always attached to Freixo de Numão, although in principle the parish priest enjoyed his own Masses, and be presented by the people. As happened with Freixo, his income was applied to the University of Coimbra on March 14, 1538.

By the middle of the eighteenth century it had three hermitages (all of them of the people and no particular ones): that of Santa Barbara, on a hilltop in front of the town and at a distance from a musket shot; One in the midst of the people, who is of the Lady of Grace, which was where the Most Holy was; Another at the bottom of the town, which is Santo Antonio.

The whole bank of the Douro, in the middle of Mós, was a scene of great bustle in the time of the Roman occupation, because the sands contained much gold. It was the race for the extraction of alluvial gold! In 1758, however, the Abbot of Mós ended with the following description: "I thought that there would be 30 to 40 years when strange men came with instruments of armor and took sands of the river and then purified them and They put them in sticks and they said that it was gold what they carried! " Today, with the river stopped by the reservoirs of the dams, nobody will dare to purify the sands in search of the gold!

In 1854 it no longer belongs to the municipality of Freixo de Numão and integrates the municipality of Vila Nova de Foz Côa.

For more details on the history of this land and these laborious people, nothing better than to refer our readers to the Monograph elaborated by Dr. Joaquim Castelinho.

High in the category of city on July 12, 1997, visiting Vila Nova de Foz Côa is to rediscover history, is to accompany the millennial process that unveils the artistic and cultural heritage in complementarity with the rusticity and the scenic beauty that the region closes and which Deserves its fruition.

Parishes edit

 
Vila Nova de Foz Côa

Administratively, the municipality is divided into 14 civil parishes (freguesias):[3]

Demographics edit

Demographic evolution
1864 1878 1890 1900 1911 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1981 1991 2001 2011
11 613 12 159 13 051 13 939 14 355 13 254 14 404 16 252 17 116 16 209 10 061 11 251 8 885 8 494 7 312
Demographic evolution by age group
1900 1911 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1981 1991 2001 2011
0–14 years old 5 001 5 270 4 596 4 751 5 479 5 469 4 861 2 315 2 576 1 509 1 067 792
15–24 years old 2 536 2 505 2 421 2 841 2 782 2 974 2 659 1 325 1 800 1 205 1 029 676
25–64 years old 5 744 5 959 5 477 6 039 6 959 7 312 7 279 4 100 4 812 4 115 4 085 3 568
= or > 65 years old 598 753 669 815 1 021 1 214 1 410 1 635 2 063 2 056 2 313 2 276
> Unknown age 43 17 73 22 36

References edit

  1. ^ Instituto Nacional de Estatística November 15, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-11-05. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
  3. ^ Diário da República. "Law nr. 11-A/2013, pages 552 133-134" (pdf) (in Portuguese). Retrieved 4 August 2014.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Côa Valley Archaeological Park

vila, nova, côa, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 2019. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Vila Nova de Foz Coa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Vila Nova de Foz Coa Portuguese pronunciation ˈvilɐ ˈnɔvɐ dɨ ˈfɔʃ ˈkoɐ is a city and a municipality in the district of Guarda Portugal The population in 2011 was 7 312 1 in an area of 398 15 square kilometres 153 73 sq mi 2 The city population is around 3 300 Main rivers in the municipal territory include the Douro and the Coa Vila Nova de Foz CoaMunicipalityFlagCoat of armsVila Nova de Foz CoaLocation in PortugalCoordinates 41 05 N 7 08 W 41 08 N 7 14 W 41 08 7 14Country PortugalRegionNorteIntermunic comm DouroDistrictGuardaParishes14Government PresidentGustavo Duarte PSD Area Total398 2 km2 153 7 sq mi Population 2011 Total7 312 Density18 km2 48 sq mi Time zoneUTC 00 00 WET Summer DST UTC 01 00 WEST The municipality includes parts in the Coa Valley Archaeological site declared by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site which partially shares with Figueira de Castelo Rodrigo and Pinhel also located in the Guarda district The closest railway station is Pocinho now the eastern terminus of the Douro railway line This line in Portuguese Linha do Douro has passenger trains services from Pocinho to Tua Peso da Regua Livracao Marco de Canaveses Penafiel Paredes Ermesinde for connections to Braga Guimaraes Viana do Castelo Rio Tinto and Porto Contents 1 History 2 Parishes 3 Demographics 4 References 5 External linksHistory editVila Nova de Foz Coa received its first charter in 1299 granted by D Dinis having been renewed by the same monarch in 1314 In 1514 a new charter was designed by D Manuel I In the county there are several monuments Among which these three national monuments the castle of Numao the Pelourinho of Vila Nova de Foz Coa and the Mother Church of the same village with a Manueline facade Another important monument in the county is the castle s best castle shale a Leonese building dating back to the early 13th century integrated in the region of Riba Coa which passed into the hands of the Portuguese crown in 1297 by the Treaty of Alcanizes 5 In its roots Vila Nova de Foz Coa meets the Palaeolithic man who with modest artifacts in the hardness of the schist he has ambitions and projects of his spiritual and material universe making this sanctuary the largest museum of outdoor rock art now Heritage of Humanity The vestiges of the human occupation more or less intense continue through the times castrejos and Romans The meager witnesses of the Suevi Visigothic and Arab periods guarantee however the continuity of the population nuclei Contrary to the vicissitudes proper to the frontier lands at these stops community life proved regular and continuous beginning in the tenth century The royal and seigniorial interest in the sense of promoting the settlement and development of this region was confirmed through the granting of charters to the inhabitants of the settlements giving them legal and administrative importance In the 19th century despite having been a scene of disorders persecutions and fratricidal struggles the Marcores guerrilla spread terror in the region that accompanied the implementation of liberalism the village of Foz Coa took over the leadership of the county after several constraints that Justified the substitution or absorption of some municipal offices namely the multiple administrative reforms of the eighteenth century Nevertheless the eight pillars that have survived since then in the area of the present county testify to the municipal autonomy and are the symbol of the ancestral community life in the Region At the end of the parish of Mos do Douro we found traces of ancient occupation in the places of Campanas and Castelo Velho They will be small fortified settlements of the Bronze Age to evaluate by the news of finds that arrived at us In contrast to what happens in the north west of Peninsular in the region of the hot Douro land the castro civilization has settled not on top of the mountains but on plateaus or small elevations embedded in valleys Hence in the first millennium BC iron men had settled in the zone of the Castle a place later Romanized and constituted by a small vico this being evaluated by the area in which the traces of materials of that period predominate Graves and a funeral inscription closing with the common acronyms S T T L let the earth be light among other materials attest to this occupation Other places of the term of Mos must have occupied in the period of Roman occupation or in the Low or High Middle Ages cases of Aldeia Velha place of Fontainhas often cited as Fontanas In 1380 the county of Numao met to appoint its attorney to the courts of Torres Novas According to the power of attorney this assignment belonged to Joao Eanes from the village of Mos In the same document Goncalo Martins also of the Mos also signs as a witness In the sixteenth century the parish had a population center of some importance 52 inhabitants according to the census of 1527 who paid to their abbey a rent of 20 000 reis in the second quarter of the century Still in the field of ecclesiastical income it is known that the Bishop charged here the fee of 2 000 reis for parochial confirmation rights In the middle of the sixteenth century the church of the Mos was of the Counts of Marialva to which belonged the right to appoint the parish priests Subsequently a bull of March 14 1583 allowed the transfer of his possession to the University of Coimbra leaving their income to revert to the university coffers It should be recalled that at the time it was common for universities to have their own income which allowed them to be financially autonomous The connection to the Coimbra University is still visible today in numerous epigraphs indicating the limits of university properties In monumental terms it is the eighteenth century that is evident being dated from this period the denominated House of the Fields or Campinhos and the Mother Church At this time the Mos already had a population of 317 inhabitants The transition from paganism to Christianity must have been made without major clashes since until the 18th century the Mother Church today s cemetery remained in the same place Castle Towards the end of this century in view of the population growth and expansion of the urban area to the west the Church was transferred to Largo do Terreiro Like all settlements between the Douro and Coa must have collected Jewish families A characteristic inscription of new Christian vote is placed on one of the doors of a house on Rua do Castelo In the eighteenth century an ennobled family certainly marked the economy of the village flourishing thanks to the use of Sumagre the culture of the vine olive oil and almond Already on March 24 1758 the Abbot of Mos responding to the inquiry sent by the Marquis of Pombal throughout the kingdom answered The fruits of this land which the inhabitants gather with greater abundance are olive oil wheat bread rye Barley lentils sumac wine almonds onion bread and wine is the best From these times came a palatial house with a coat of arms known as Solar dos Assecas It belonged to the first Baron of Foz Coa Francisco Antonio Campos and was later acquired by the Gaspar family It had the parish of Mos do Douro in its history men connected to the progressive chains In the midst of the blossoming of Liberalism someone who was very convinced of the values of the revolution had the words Et Pluribus Unum 1820 one by one and all by one engraved over the door of his house a phrase that fits well with the motto Of the revolutions of the time coined with the liberation trilogy based on Liberty Equality Fraternity The Moors suffered at the beginning of the nineteenth century the entry of the Napoleonic troops after they had occupied Freixo de Numao on January 26 1811 The population unable to resist left the village sheltering in the hills near the Janvao with the exception of the parish priest P Antonio de Almeida The fratricidal struggles between liberals and absolutists also did not spare the Mos who saw the death of the soldier Bernardo Antonio Rolo in the siege of Oporto and later Jose Polido assassinated by the partisans of the Marcais The population growth between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is certainly due to the Douro railway line the construction of the Freixo station and the great occupation that was given to the residents of Mos by the Portuguese Railways This Parish in the words of Father Manuel Goncalves da Costa Diocese of Lamego was never a civil or ecclesiastical center always attached to Freixo de Numao although in principle the parish priest enjoyed his own Masses and be presented by the people As happened with Freixo his income was applied to the University of Coimbra on March 14 1538 By the middle of the eighteenth century it had three hermitages all of them of the people and no particular ones that of Santa Barbara on a hilltop in front of the town and at a distance from a musket shot One in the midst of the people who is of the Lady of Grace which was where the Most Holy was Another at the bottom of the town which is Santo Antonio The whole bank of the Douro in the middle of Mos was a scene of great bustle in the time of the Roman occupation because the sands contained much gold It was the race for the extraction of alluvial gold In 1758 however the Abbot of Mos ended with the following description I thought that there would be 30 to 40 years when strange men came with instruments of armor and took sands of the river and then purified them and They put them in sticks and they said that it was gold what they carried Today with the river stopped by the reservoirs of the dams nobody will dare to purify the sands in search of the gold In 1854 it no longer belongs to the municipality of Freixo de Numao and integrates the municipality of Vila Nova de Foz Coa For more details on the history of this land and these laborious people nothing better than to refer our readers to the Monograph elaborated by Dr Joaquim Castelinho High in the category of city on July 12 1997 visiting Vila Nova de Foz Coa is to rediscover history is to accompany the millennial process that unveils the artistic and cultural heritage in complementarity with the rusticity and the scenic beauty that the region closes and which Deserves its fruition Parishes edit nbsp Vila Nova de Foz CoaAdministratively the municipality is divided into 14 civil parishes freguesias 3 Almendra Castelo Melhor Cedovim Chas Custoias Freixo de Numao Horta Muxagata Numao Santa Comba Sebadelhe Seixas Touca Vila Nova de Foz CoaDemographics editDemographic evolution1864 1878 1890 1900 1911 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1981 1991 2001 201111 613 12 159 13 051 13 939 14 355 13 254 14 404 16 252 17 116 16 209 10 061 11 251 8 885 8 494 7 312Demographic evolution by age group1900 1911 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1981 1991 2001 20110 14 years old 5 001 5 270 4 596 4 751 5 479 5 469 4 861 2 315 2 576 1 509 1 067 79215 24 years old 2 536 2 505 2 421 2 841 2 782 2 974 2 659 1 325 1 800 1 205 1 029 67625 64 years old 5 744 5 959 5 477 6 039 6 959 7 312 7 279 4 100 4 812 4 115 4 085 3 568 or gt 65 years old 598 753 669 815 1 021 1 214 1 410 1 635 2 063 2 056 2 313 2 276 gt Unknown age 43 17 73 22 36References edit Instituto Nacional de Estatistica Archived November 15 2016 at the Wayback Machine Areas das freguesias concelhos distritos e pais Archived from the original on 2018 11 05 Retrieved 2018 11 05 Diario da Republica Law nr 11 A 2013 pages 552 133 134 pdf in Portuguese Retrieved 4 August 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Vila Nova de Foz Coa nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vila Nova de Foz Coa Official website Coa Valley Archaeological Park Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vila Nova de Foz Coa amp oldid 1147562766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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