A Mariña Central is a comarca in the Galician Province of Lugo . The overall population of this local region is 28,955 (2019). This region is a political-administrative division of A Mariña de Lugo macro-region. To the north and northeast the region borders the Bay of Biscay , on the northwest with La Mariña, to the west and south by the Terra Chá , Meira on the southeast and east with A Mariña Oriental.
6-697: Foz ( Galician pronunciation: [fɔθ] ) is a town and municipality in the A Mariña Central comarca in the Galician province of Lugo . It has been historically linked to the Ancient Province of Mondoñedo and also linked to the arrival of Briton immigrants during the Dark Ages (5th and 6th centuries) fleeing by sea from the British Isles (see Bishop Maeloc , Britonia and San Martiño de Mondoñedo ). It has 9800 inhabitants. It borders
12-566: Is still an important seafaring tradition. The main monuments of Foz are the Basilica de San Martiño and the Manor of the Counts of Fontao Foz is twinned with: 43°34′10″N 7°15′30″W / 43.56944°N 7.25833°W / 43.56944; -7.25833 A Mari%C3%B1a Central The landscape of the region has three distinct relief units: the shallow and coastal plains,
18-570: The Latin word faux which graphically describes the river mouth of the Masma river; Foz is the Galician term for base level . The foundation of Foz dates back to pre-Roman times, as attested by the existing forts Fazouro and Pena do Altar. Its foundation may originate in the time of the Ártabros or, according to the historian Amor Meilán, a factory may have been established by the Tartessos . During
24-556: The coastal municipalities of Burela and Barreiros , and the inland municipalities of Lourenzá , Mondoñedo , O Valadouro , Alfoz , and Cervo . Foz is a coastal town on the shores of the Cantabrian Sea at the mouth of the river Masma, which forms the Foz estuary, with an approximate area of 100 km². Although Foz was previously a fishing village, most of its economic resources now come from tourism. The name Foz comes from
30-598: The ninth century the town had flourished since the establishment of the episcopal headquarters in San Martiño de Mondoñedo. At the time of Ferdinand and Isabella, Foz kept certain privileges and exemptions as a result of its commercial importance. During the sixteenth and seventeenth Foz had a major port and one of the three most important shipyards in Galicia. Shipowners and fishermen engaged mainly in whaling. This important fishery has declined over time, but today there
36-488: The valleys of the rivers Masma (Lorenzá) and Ouro ( O Valadouro ), and low-lying, undulating hills as the Sierra del Gistral (Serra do Xistral). The coast is steep and the small coves and inlets are interspersed with rivers and estuaries ( Foz ). The predominant vegetation consists of oaks, pines, eucalyptus afforestation and grassland. The climate is oceanic since the daily and seasonal temperature variations are small due to
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