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Municipalities of Portugal





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The municipality (Portuguese: municípioorconcelho) is the second-level administrative subdivisionofPortugal, as defined by the 1976 Constitution.[1]

Municipality
  • Also known as:
  • Concelho
  • Category2nd-level administrative division
    LocationPortugal
    Found inAdministrative region
    Autonomous region
    Created
    Number308
    Populations451–529,485
    Areas7.9–1,720.6 km2
    Government
    Subdivisions

    As a general rule, each municipality is further subdivided into parishes (freguesias); the municipalities in the north of the country usually have a higher number of parishes. Six municipalities are composed of only one parish, and Barcelos, with 61 parishes, has the most. Corvo is, by law, the only municipality with no parishes.

    Since the creation of a democratic local administration, in 1976, the Portuguese municipalities have been ruled by a system composed of an executive body (the municipal chamber) and a deliberative body (the municipal assembly). The municipal chamber is the executive body and is composed of the president of the municipality and a number of councillors proportional to the municipality's population. The municipal assembly is composed of the presidents of all the parishes that compose the municipality, as well as by a number of directly elected deputies, at least equal to the number of parish presidents plus one. Both bodies are elected for four years.[1]

    Portugal has an entirely separate system of ceremonial cities and towns. Cities and towns are located in municipalities but often do not have the same boundaries, even they are continuously built up. There are around twice as many cities and towns as there are municipalities.

    History

    edit

    The municipality has been the most stable subdivision of Portugal since the foundation of the country in the 12th century.[2][3] They have their origin in the foral, a legal document, issued by the King of Portugal, which assigned privileges to a town or a region. The present subdivisions have their origins in the 19th century after the administrative reforms conducted by the middle of the 19th century by the governments of the constitutional monarchy.

    The concelhos probably formed after the expulsion of the Visigothic rulers by the Moors during the Umayyad conquest of Hispania. Towns were thus left free to govern themselves, and the population started to organize in councils (concelhos in Portuguese) in order to govern the town and surrounding lands. These were also a reminder of Roman municipalities.

    The existence since the Middle Ages of a large number of small municipalities with no financial resources and without people qualified to take part in municipal councils caused the stagnation of their growth. The Liberal revolution of 1836, resulted in the suppression/annexation of many of these smaller municipalities, which allowed the infusion of new revenues and facilitated growth in population and size.[2]

    Geography

    edit

    There are 308 municipalities in Portugal: 278 in mainland Portugal, 19 in the autonomous region of the Azores, and 11 in Madeira. They are usually named for their biggest city, or at least, their historically most important city or town. However, the municipality is not synonymous with the city (or urban centre) and can include various towns or cities. In Portugal, cities/towns are a social distinction based on population size and associated services and have no legal representation in law or constitution.

    Portugal has no unincorporated areas; all the national territory belongs to a municipality, including uninhabited islands: BerlengastoPeniche, Desertas IslandstoSanta Cruz, Selvagens IslandstoFunchal, and Formigas IsletstoVila do Porto.

    Portugal is divided into 18 continental districts (Portuguese: distritos) and two autonomous regions (Portuguese: regiões autónomas), Azores and Madeira. The table below is the distribution of the municipalities within these districts and the autonomous regions:

     
    The 18 districts and 2 autonomous regions of Portugal, subdivided into their municipalities.
    Order District/Autonomous Region Municipalities
    01. Aveiro
    19
    02. Beja
    14
    03. Braga
    14
    04. Bragança
    12
    05. Castelo Branco
    11
    06. Coimbra
    17
    07. Évora
    14
    08. Faro
    16
    09. Guarda
    14
    10. Leiria
    16
    11. Lisbon
    16
    12. Portalegre
    15
    13. Porto
    18
    14. Santarém
    21
    15. Setúbal
    13
    16. Viana do Castelo
    10
    17. Vila Real
    14
    18. Viseu
    24
    19. Azores
    19
    20. Madeira
    11

    The biggest municipalities are those located in rural and inland areas where the dominating property type is the latifundia, such as Beja, Évora, or Portalegre in the south, and also in other less populated areas, such as BragançaorCastelo Branco.

    The most populous municipalities are those located near the sea, and especially around the metropolitan areasofLisbon, Porto, and Braga, while the less populous municipalities are located in the inland regions of Alentejo and Trás-os-Montes. The municipalities with the lowest population densities are also found in these inland regions, with smaller populations distributed over a greater area.

    Demographics

    edit

    The following chart show municipalities (as of 2022) with populations over 100,000.[4] Around 190 municipalities have less than 20,000 inhabitants each.

    Rank Municipality Population Land area (km2) Density (people/km2) Metropolitan area
    1 Lisbon 548,703 84.8 6,430 Greater Lisbon
    2 Sintra 388,767 319.2 1,182 Greater Lisbon
    3 Vila Nova de Gaia 307,563 170.8 1,769 Greater Porto
    4 Porto 240,592 41.3 5,752 Greater Porto
    5 Cascais 213 928 97.4 2,106 Greater Lisbon
    6 Loures 203,724 169.3 1,214 Greater Lisbon
    7 Braga 197,594 183.2 992
    8 Almada 178,254 70.0 2,476 Greater Lisbon
    9 Matosinhos 176,617 62.2 2,812 Greater Porto
    10 Amadora 174,511 23.8 7,376 Greater Lisbon
    11 Oeiras 172,742 45.7 3,765 Greater Lisbon
    12 Seixal 169,797 95.5 1,654 Greater Lisbon
    13 Gondomar 166,900 133.3 1,262 Greater Porto
    14 Guimarães 156,277 241.3 655
    15 Odivelas 150,366 26.4 5,445 Greater Lisbon
    16 Coimbra 142,252 319.0 448
    17 Maia 140,041 83.7 1,613 Greater Porto
    18 Santa Maria da Feira 138,344 215.1 648 Greater Porto
    19 Vila Franca de Xira 137,994 317.7 430 Greater Lisbon
    20 Vila Nova de Famalicão 134,883 201.7 663
    21 Leiria 130,605 564.7 226
    22 Setúbal 122,547 171.9 703 Greater Lisbon
    23 Barcelos 116,493 378.9 318
    24 Funchal 106,429 76.3 1,469
    25 Viseu 100,105 507.1 197

    See also

    edit

    References

    edit
    1. ^ a b "7th Constitutional Revision" (PDF). Assembly of the Republic (Portugal). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2014.
  • ^ a b Silveira, Luís (May 2000). "Origins and Evolution of the Portuguese Administrative System in Comparative Perspective". Lisbon, Portugal: Universidade Nova de Lisboa.  
  • ^ Manuel Lima (2005), "Divisões Administrativas de Portugal: Um olhar pela diversidade da divisão territorial portuguesa" (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 5 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-20.
  • ^ "População residente (N.º) por Local de residência (NUTS - 2013), Sexo e Grupo etário (Por ciclos de vida); Anual". www.ine.pt (in Portuguese). Statistics Portugal. Retrieved 18 June 2023.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Municipalities_of_Portugal&oldid=1233295810"
     



    Last edited on 8 July 2024, at 10:04  





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    This page was last edited on 8 July 2024, at 10:04 (UTC).

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