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55-505: Sallent de Llobregat ( Catalan pronunciation: [səˈʎen də ʎuβɾəˈɣat] ) or Sallent is a municipality in the comarca of Bages , Province of Barcelona , in the Autonomous Community of Catalonia , Spain. The river Llobregat divides the municipality into two halves. Its main resources are mining and industry. It was the birthplace of Saint Anthony Mary Claret (1807–1870). According to Spanish census data, this

110-560: A city or town is granted only for ceremonial purposes, typically with smaller boundaries than municipalities. Some municipalities have several cities. Starting in 2003, Eurostat has defined regions and subregions in the Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS) standard. These are coincide with some local government borders, but are otherwise only used for statistical purposes. There are 18 districts in continental Portugal : The distribution of Portuguese districts

165-513: A court of first instance. The comarca may correspond to a municipality or group several small municipalities together. Presently, in Brazil, there are 2,680 comarcas . A judiciary organization reform implemented in Portugal in 2014 reduced the number of comarcas from 231 to 23. According to the new judicial division of 2015, Angola will be again subdivided into 60 comarcas , each with

220-507: A Regional Government ( Governo Regional ), that constitutes a Regional Cabinet, comprising a President ( Presidente do Governo Regional ) and several Regional Secretaries ( Secretários Regionais ). The Azores ( Açores ) is an archipelago of nine islands and several islets that were discovered and settled by the Portuguese in the late 15th century. The Azores lies a third of the distance between Europe and North America, along

275-459: A Regional Government ( Governo Regional ), that constitutes a Regional Cabinet, comprising a President ( Presidente do Governo Regional ) and several Regional Secretaries ( Secretários Regionais ). Their legislatures are designated Legislative Assembly . A plan to divide mainland Portugal in eight regions was defeated in a referendum in 1998 . The metropolitan areas of Lisbon and Porto were created in 1991. A law passed in 2003 supported

330-530: A court of first instance. The courts of comarca will replace the previous provincial and municipal courts. Comarca is also the name of a suburb of Luanda , the capital of Angola. The ninth-largest metropolitan area in Mexico is known as the Comarca Lagunera . The region is made up of 15 municipalities, including the cities of Torreón , Coahuila , Gómez Palacio and Lerdo Durango . In Panama,

385-701: A term which in the Iberian Peninsula refers only to regions historically ruled by a conde ( count or earl ). However, "comarca" is occasionally used such as in the Spanish Misplaced Pages entry for comarca and some translations of The Lord of the Rings (see below). In the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP), comarcas are used as follows. From the Middle Ages until

440-432: Is a unitary state with delegated authority to three levels of local government that cover the entire country: The Judiciary of Portugal has a separate geographic system. The government structure is based on the 1976 Constitution , adopted after the 1974 Carnation Revolution . The powers of the 18 Districts were removed when the government decided not to reappoint their Civil Governors in 2011. The legal status of

495-756: Is derived from the term marca , meaning a "march, mark" , plus the prefix co - , meaning "together, jointly". The comarca is known in Aragonese as redolada ( IPA: [reðoˈlaða] ) and in Basque as eskualde ( IPA: [es̺kualde] ). In addition, in Galician , comarcas are also called bisbarras ( IPA: [bizˈβarɐs] ). Although the English word " county " and its near synonym " shire " have similar meanings, they are usually translated into Spanish and Portuguese as condado ,

550-525: Is developmentally comparable to urban centers in the Canary or Balearic Islands . The division of the Portuguese territory is established in title eight (Título VIII) of the Portuguese constitution: granting local authority to territorial collectivities with representative organs to affect the interests of the local populations. These collectivities are defined as autonomous regions , administrative regions , municipalities and civil parishes , but reserves

605-405: Is nominally homogeneous, although there are outliers (Beja for example is 4.6 times larger than the smallest district, Viana do Castelo). But these divisions bely the inadequacies and disparities that exist within the country: the distribution of population and gross domestic product between territorial units is markedly different. The district of Beja, for example, represents approximately 11.5% of

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660-589: Is the population of Sallent in recent years. This Province of Barcelona location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Comarca A comarca ( Spanish: [koˈmaɾka] , Portuguese: [kuˈmaɾkɐ] , Catalan: [kuˈmarkə] , Galician: [koˈmaɾka̝] ) is a traditional region or local administrative division found in Portugal , Spain , and some of their former colonies, like Brazil , Nicaragua , and Panama . The term

715-526: The Corvo Island in the Azores) is the only Portuguese municipality without a civil parish. The parish, in contrast with the municipalities, had their base in the ecclesiastical divisions that "had its origin in the fact that neighbours professed the same religion and professed their faith and divinity in the same temple" . Between 1216 and 1223, Afonso II of Portugal began a process of legitimizing

770-603: The Mid-Atlantic Ridge . The government and administration of the archipelago is distributed between the three capitals of the former districts of the Azores: the regional parliament is located in the city of Horta (on Faial Island ); Ponta Delgada (on São Miguel Island ) is the most populous city and home to the Regional Presidency and administration; while Angra do Heroísmo (on Terceira Island ),

825-508: The comarca may refer simply to a loosely-defined region. Because of the word's long-standing use, comarca is sometimes used as the basis for the promotion of tourism with emphasis on local cultural tradition and history. Some Spanish-language editions of the British writer J. R. R. Tolkien 's works use the term La Comarca as a translation for the English " The Shire ". Administrative divisions of Portugal#Districts Portugal

880-530: The comarca indígena is an administrative region for an area with a substantial Amerindian population. Four comarcas ( Emberá-Wounaan , Guna Yala , Naso Tjër Di , and Ngöbe-Buglé ) exist as equivalent to provinces . Two smaller comarcas ( Guna de Madugandí and Guna de Wargandí ) are subordinate to a province and considered equivalent to a corregimiento . The term comarca is used in several regions in Spain: In other places, such as Extremadura ,

935-418: The municipal assembly . Before the 2013 local government reforms, the 308 municipalities were subdivided into 4,259 civil parishes. As part of the national government's attempt to control spending, in light of the sovereign debt crisis , in 2012 the government of Pedro Passos Coelho introduced a plan to reform the administrative divisions, in order to create efficiencies and save money. The plan envisioned

990-416: The 16th century, the comarcas corresponded to the large administrative divisions of Portugal. There were six such traditional divisions: Entre-Douro-e-Minho , Trás-os-Montes , Beira , Estremadura , Alentejo and Algarve , of which the last had the honorary title of "kingdom". In the 16th century, the comarcas started gradually to be referred to as "provinces". The name " comarca " was then applied to

1045-504: The 1832 reforms. The initiatives envisioned a comprehensive series of provinces that would have included European Portugal, archipelagos and extra-local dependencies in Southeast Asia, Africa and India. These colonies included: Initially the population of these overseas territories were made to exploit resources (minerals, spices, wood or slaves), but later there was a sense of evangelisation or lusotropolicalism , that facilitated

1100-482: The French départements , with the objective to facilitate the action of government and permit access to the authorities. The district is the most relevant and historically significant subdivision of the nation's territory; it serves as the basis for a series of administrative divisions, such as electoral constituencies or district football associations , as well as being a socially recognizable territorial division of

1155-514: The Portuguese overseas territories, instead of the previous overseas dominion , during the administrative reforms of the beginning of the 19th century, following the idea that these territories were as part of Portugal as the Portuguese European provinces. In the beginning of the 20th century, most of these territories started to be referred as colonies , although the term overseas provinces continued also to be used. Only after 1951,

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1210-421: The Portuguese territory by conferring charters to nobles, clergy and municipal chambers (which would not be completed until after 1249 (under Afonso III of Portugal ), making the parish the smallest division. From the 19th century freguesia began to refer to the civil/administrative entity, while the paróquia ( Latin and 19th-century Portuguese : parochia ) became affiliated with the religious entity. Since

1265-537: The Portuguese territory was settled early, and maintained with stability after the 13th century. The first division of the Portuguese territory was based exclusively on the Roman Iberian provinces of Hispania Tarraconensis , Lusitania and Hispania Baetica , established by Emperor Augustus between 27 and 13 B.C. The actual territory of Portugal north of the Douro, the province of Tarraconensis, occupied half of

1320-405: The area of Portugal, while Viana do Castelo is less than 2.5%. But, in comparison, Beja represents only 1.6% of the population of Portugal. Portugal is primarily a seafaring nation, and traditionally human settlement has congregated along the coastline, so much so that the coastal districts, while being relatively small, were disproportionately larger by population. The six largest districts (with

1375-580: The coast. But, until 1832, the provinces did not serve an administrative function, although they did mark the differences in habits, linguistic peculiarities and socio-cultural characteristics. The province remained a military designation, chiefed by the General das Armas (Military Governor), expressly forbidden from influencing municipal affairs. During the Liberal regime, some of the liberal politicians conceived an administrative system where provinces were

1430-520: The colonization of these lands. The first significant colony was Brazil whose history included a period as kingdom within the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves (1815–1822), before a political schism would result in its independence in 1822. The Eurostat -based NUTS system subdivides the nation into three levels: NUTS I, NUTS II and NUTS III. In some European partners, as

1485-534: The country, and in the King's Testamento do Reino de Portugal he recognized the five "regions" of the nation: Antre Douro e Minho ; Antre Douro e Mondego ; Beira , Estremadura and Antre Tejo e Odiana . Dinis's successor, Afonso IV (1325–1357), instituted a system of six official comarcas , that reflected a concrete definition of these regions: Antre Douro e Minho , Antre Douro e Mondego , Beira , Estremadura , Antre Tejo e Odiana and Algarve . Between

1540-473: The country. In 1976, Portugal was divided into 18 districts and two autonomous regions (the Azores and Madeira ), consisting of 308 municipalities ( concelhos ), which in turn were divided into 4257 local government authorities ( freguesias ). Article 291 of the 1976 Constitution defined the districts as a transitional level of administration, awaiting the formation of the administrative regions. In

1595-399: The creation of a democratic local administration, in 1976, the Portuguese municipalities have been ruled by a system composed by an executive body (the municipal chamber ) and a deliberative body (the municipal assembly ). The municipal chamber ( câmara municipal ) is the executive body, and is composed of a president of the municipality and a number of councillors whose number depends on

1650-404: The creation of a democratic local administration, in 1976, the Portuguese parishes have been ruled by a system composed by an executive body (the junta de freguesia , "parish board") and a deliberative body (the assembleia de freguesia , "parish assembly"). The members of the assembleia de freguesia are publicly elected every four years. The presidents of the parish boards are also members of

1705-621: The creation of more metropolitan areas, urban communities and other associations of municipalities, but a law passed in 2008 abolished these, converting them into intermunicipal communities . Finally in law 75/2013 September 2013 the current two types of administrative regions were defined: The Metropolitan Areas are territorial units formed by grouping municipalities, in order to economize on municipal investments and services. As of 2014, there are two metropolitan areas that correspond to Level III NUTS regions: (Other cities have metropolitan areas as defined by commuting patterns, but do not have

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1760-427: The exception of Santarém) are the six districts with the smallest populations and common character: a border with Spain. Of these interior districts, which represent 63.8% of the nation and have a population that is less than two million residents, is only marginally less than the population of the district of Lisbon. The district system dates back to 25 April 1835, a creation of the Liberal government, and inspired by

1815-661: The historical and cultural capital, is the home of the Azorean judiciary and seat of the Diocese of the Azores. Madeira is an archipelago that includes two principal islands, Madeira and Porto Santo , plus two uninhabited natural group of islands, the Desertas and Savage Islands ( Ilhas Selvagens ). The archipelago is located closer to Africa than Europe, is highly commercial and urbanized; its regional capital ( Funchal )

1870-585: The municipality is usually much larger than the city or town after which it is named. The largest in area is Odemira with 1720.60 km , the smallest is São João da Madeira with an area of 7.94 km . Nearly all municipalities are subdivided into civil parishes . Barcelos is the municipality with the largest number of civil parishes (61). There are six municipalities that have only one civil parish: São João da Madeira , Alpiarça , Barrancos , Castanheira de Pera , Porto Santo (Madeira) and São Brás de Alportel . The municipality of Corvo (comprising

1925-489: The municipality's population. The municipal assembly ( assembleia municipal ) is composed of the presidents of all the civil parishes plus a number of directly elected representatives that has to be at least equal to the number of civil parish presidents plus one, and which otherwise depends on the municipal population. There are 308 municipalities in Portugal. They are usually named for their biggest city, or at least, their historically most important city or town. However,

1980-404: The national territory, that includes mainland Portugal and the two archipelagos, the municipalities ( municípios , colloquially known as concelhos ) have been the most constant territorial subdivision in the past 900 years. While a term for municipality ( concelho ) appeared in the 13th century, to "express a community constituted in a territory of varying extensions, whose residents –

2035-420: The neighbours of the municipality – are granted major or minor administrative autonomy" , the territorial division predates its use. Preceding the nation's independence, the oldest of the larger municipalities still in existence Coimbra and Santarém were founded in 1085 e 1095, respectively. São João da Pesqueira (in the district of Viseu ) is the oldest Portuguese municipality, founded in 1055. Since

2090-465: The new administrative and judicial subdivisions of the provinces, created in the 17th century. Each comarca corresponded to the territorial area of jurisdiction of a corregedor , a high-ranking administrative and judicial officer who represented the Crown in the district. In the 19th century, the comarcas were replaced by separate administrative and judicial divisions to reflect the implementation of

2145-415: The parish, instituted by the religious orders that dominated the country, controlled local ecclesiastical power at the local level. During the reign of King Dinis (1279–1325), the monarch instituted a series of inquiries throughout the kingdom which resulted, a few years later, in the configuration of the territory into provinces and municipalities. This was the first official recognition of the diversity of

2200-579: The peninsula, while the province of Lusitania, included the area south of the Douro. These Roman provinces were themselves subdivided into conventus iuridicus : Conventus Bracarum , its seat in Bracara Augusta (today the city of Braga); Conventus Scallabitanus , its seat in Scallabis (today the city of Santarém); and Conventus Pacensis , its seat in Pax Julia (today Beja). By the end of

2255-657: The period between 2003 and 2013 the whole continental territory of Portugal was subdivided into metropolitan areas and intermunicipal communities, which now form the top-level administrative divisions of the continental territory. The powers of the 18 Districts were removed when the government decided not to reappoint their Civil Governors in 2011. Since 1976, Portugal conceded political autonomy to its North Atlantic archipelagos ( Madeira and Azores ) due to their distance, isolation, geographical context and socio-economic circumstances. The regional autonomies have their own organic laws, regional governments and administration, overseen by

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2310-516: The provinces to characterize traditional and rural Portugal. Each province intended to be a regional community, to which were given decentralized powers . Yet, the Districts continued to define administrative and political control, much like the organization of public security for the State, limiting the powers of local government. This organizational structure for the territory resulted in a loss of

2365-458: The reform of the management, territorial geography and political form of how Portugal functioned at the local level, including specifically at the freguesia and município levels. In addition to the reduction of the number of representatives in the local boards, the plan also established criteria for the reduction, amalgamation or extinction of various civil parishes. The reform was implemented according to law 11-A/2013 January 2013, which defined

2420-563: The reign of Afonso IV and the 20th century there were numerous alterations to the limits of the nation, a consequence of development and population growth. Further modifications to the limits of these provinces occurred in the Plano de Ordenamento da Mata Nacional da Machada (1864), the first scientific delimiting of forest resources, and the Projecto Geral da Arborização dos Areais Móveis de Portugal (1897), which modified land usage along

2475-460: The reorganization of the civil parishes, Since the 2013 reform, there are 3,091 parishes in Portugal. The largest in area is Alcácer do Sal (Santa Maria do Castelo e Santiago) e Santa Susana with 888.35 km , the smallest is Borba (São Bartolomeu) with an area of 0.20 km . Portugal has a complex administrative structure, a consequence of a millennium of various territorial divisions. Unlike other European countries like Spain or France,

2530-654: The right of urban areas and islands to establish other forms of local authority. In defining the rights and privileges of these entities, the constitution also defines sources of income, that includes local heritage, budgets and equalization transfers from the State, in addition to defining the basic role of local government at each level. Since 1976, Portugal conceded political autonomy to its North Atlantic archipelagos (the Azores and Madeira ) due to their distance, isolation, geographical context and socio-economic circumstances. The regional autonomies have their own organic laws, regional governments and administration, overseen by

2585-496: The same legal status and are all under 1 million inhabitants.) The intermunicipal communities replaced the urban communities, the intermunicipal communities for general purposes and some metropolitan areas that were created in 2003, and abolished in 2008. The territories of the intermunicipal communities are (roughly) based on the NUTS III statistical regions. As of 2014, there are 21 intermunicipal communities: Apart from

2640-607: The sense of regional identity, which was only kept alive by oral traditions, based on regional references of origin. There was a substantial difference between the European provinces and regions and the overseas colonies (the so-called overseas provinces ). Following the Carnation Revolution , the regions and provinces were abolished and the districts became the second level administrative regions. The term overseas province started to be used to designate each of

2695-467: The separation of executive and judicial powers. The new administrative divisions became the administrative districts and the new judicial divisions kept the name comarca . In Brazil, Portugal, and some other countries of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries, the comarca now is the basic territorial division in the judicial system. It corresponds to the territorial area of jurisdiction of

2750-406: The six traditional provinces, 11 new ones were established: Minho , Douro Litoral , Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro , Beira Alta , Beira Baixa , Beira Litoral , Estremadura , Ribatejo , Alto Alentejo , Baixo Alentejo and Algarve . These were based in the natural regions identified by the geographer Amorim Girão in several studies he published between 1922 and 1930. The Estado Novo regime used

2805-548: The term colony was completely dropped and the term overseas province was exalted by the government of António de Oliveira Salazar to shift the attention of anti-colonial protests in the United Nations. But the history of extra-local territories (colonies or provinces) within Portuguese administration dates back to the first settlements along the African coast, South-east Asia and Brazil, and were instituted as part of

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2860-527: The third century, Emperor Diocletian administratively reordered Tarraconesis, dividing it into three separate territories (Tarraconensis, Carthaginensis and Callaecia), the latter comprising the northern Portugal, Galicia and Asturias . These divisions remained constant even after the Visigoths controlled the Iberian peninsula. During the period of Al-Andalus and Muslim caliphates, the Iberian peninsula

2915-480: The top level tier of government, maintaining their former names, but with different borders. The debate over the importance of provinces only arose from fears that there would be an excessive concentration of power in the hands of governmental officers ( prefeitos ). The adoption of the 17 districts (1835) instead of eight provinces was an attempt to dissolve such power. In 1936, the provinces were reestablished as administrative divisions in Portugal. However, instead

2970-476: Was also a tendency to demarcate lands associated with settlements or seigneurial properties; there was a constant history of forals (the royal charters) being allocated for unorganized territories, as a means to primarily establish fealty rights and encourage medieval settlement. Historically, the institution of the foral system was a way to divide the territory and to establish local administrative control (and not regional or hierarchical continuity). Similarly

3025-586: Was divided administratively into provinces ( kuwar ) and municipalities ( kurar ), along the lines of the Roman-Visigothic delineations. Meanwhile, the taifa of Badajoz dominated the spaces of Beiras, Estremadura and a great part of the Alentejo. With the expansion of the Portuguese national territory, following the conquest of new lands, the monarchy imposed a structure that permitted permanent dominion and organization of territorial space. There

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