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Amarante, Portugal

Amarante is a city and a municipality in the Tâmega e Sousa subregion in northern Portugal. The population in 2021 was 52,116, in an area of 301.33 square kilometres (116.34 mi2). The city itself, encompassed by the parish of São Gonçalo, Madalena, Cepelos and Gatão had a population of 11,564 in 2021. The city has been part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network under the category of City of Music since 2017.

History
Iron age and Roman period Human presence in the Amarante area is sparsely attested before the Iron Age, with only isolated finds. From the Iron Age onward, and more consistently during the Roman period, settlement becomes better documented. One of the main sites is the Castro de Ladário, a fortified hilltop settlement occupied from the 1st century BCE to the 5th century CE. It may have served as the main center of the Atucausenses, a local tribal group identified in a Roman inscription found nearby in Pascoaes. Roman occupation is also evidenced at rural sites such as Pascoaes and Boavista, Cepelos, likely small farming communities (villae or vici) with water access and in proximity to regional roadways. Several Roman necropolises have been identified within the municipality, including at Misericórdia, Barral, and Ataúdes, along with rock-cut wine presses which suggests local wine production. The arrival of the Dominican friar Gundisalvus of Amarante to Amarante during the early 13th century marks a period of development for the town. Amarante played a key role in the Battle of the Bridge of Amarante during the second French invasion of Portugal in 1809, part of the Peninsular War. French forces under Jean-de-Dieu Soult, commanded by Louis Henri Loison, attempted to secure a route between Porto and Spain. After pillaging and burning the villages of Vila Meã, Manhufe and Pidre, they were held at the Tâmega River by Portuguese troops led by Francisco da Silveira. For 14 days, Silveira’s largely ill-equipped force, including local citizens and clergy, resisted repeated French assaults on the bridge of São Gonçalo. On 2 May by detonating explosives under cover of fog, forcing the defenders to retreat. However, Silveira regrouped and later recaptured the town, compelling the French withdrawal from the region.. In 1836, the town of Amarante had 364 households. Between 1909 and 2009 Amarante was served by the Tâmega line, a narrow-gauge railway line linking it to Livração, on the Douro line. Between 1926 and 1949, the line extended beyond Amarante, reaching Celorico de Basto, Mondim de Basto and ending in Arco de Baúlhe. The section beyond Amarante was closed to all traffic in 1990, and the final section was closed on 25 March 2009, with bus replacement services continuing until the end of 2011. ==Geography==
Geography
Amarante is situated in northern Portugal, within the Porto District and within the Tâmega e Sousa subregion. The municipality is bordered by the municipalities of Felgueiras, Celorico de Basto and Mondim de Basto to the north, Lousada to the west, Penafiel, Marco de Canaveses and Baião to the south and Santa Marta de Penaguião and Vila Real to the east. The municipality is located on the western side of the Serra do Marão mountain range, close to the Aboboreira mountains section. The Tâmega River runs through the town and the municipality and is crossed by a large arched bridge, the . Climate Parishes Administratively, the municipality is divided into 26 civil parishes: • Aboadela, Sanche e VárzeaAmarante (São Gonçalo), Madalena, Cepelos e GatãoAnsiãesBustelo, Carneiro e Carvalho de ReiCandemilFigueiró (Santiago e Santa Cristina)FregimFreixo de Cima e de BaixoFridãoGondarJazenteLombaLouredoLufreiMancelosOlo e CanadeloPadroneloReal, Ataíde e OliveiraRebordeloSalvador do MonteSão Simão de GouveiaTelõesTravancaVila CaizVila Chã do MarãoVila Garcia, Aboim e Chapa ==Economy==
Economy
The municipality features the Amarante Golf Course, an 18-hole, par 68 course designed by Portuguese architect Jorge Santana da Silva. It was founded in 1997 in Quinta da Deveza in the parish of Fregim about from the town centre. == Infrastructure ==
Infrastructure
Amarante lies around half a kilometre from the A4 Motorway. There is also a bus station, served principally by Rodonorte, to the south of the Támega river. The city has been without a railway connection since 2009, following the closure of the Tâmega line. Amarante features an ˝Ecopista˝ pathway for bicycles and pedestrians using a section of the former railway bed of the Tâmega line north of the city. The path runs for , alongside the Tâmega river through a landscape of vineyards, farmland, and villages, until the northern end in Arco de Baúlhe. The path features several notable examples of railway engineering, including the Gatão Tunnel and the bridges of Santa Natália, Carvalhas, and Barreirinho. ==Architecture==
Architecture
The architecture of the Amarante region is mainly in the Romanesque style, with a number of Romanesque monuments (colonnades, arches, tympana and columns) throughout the region. They were built in deserted areas or on crossroads on the outskirts of inhabited areas, serving as meeting places, accommodation and defensive positions. Amarante became part of the Sousa Valley Romanesque Route (Rota do Românico) project on the 12 March 2010. Important religious buildings can be found to the north of the Tâmega, and include the Travanca monastery, the Mancelos church, the Telões church, the Freixo de Baixo monastery and the Gatão church. On the southern side of the river, can be found the Jazente church, the Lufrei church and the Gondar monastery which are in a more modest style. • Church of Salvador () • Church of Santa Maria () • Church of São João Baptista () • Convent of São Gonçalo de Amarante () • Monastery of Divino Salvador () • Monastery of Gondar () • Monastery of Lufrei () • Monastery of Mancelos () • Monastery of Telões () • Monastery of São Salvador de Travanca () ==Notable citizens==
Notable citizens
named, ironically, for the Gonçalo de Amarante • Gundisalvus of Amarante (1187 in Vizela - 1259 in Amarante), Roman Catholic priest and member of the Order of Preachers. He was canonized in 1560, and beatified in 1561 • Diogo Veloso (1558-1599) a Portuguese adventurer active in Southeast AsiaJosé Guedes de Carvalho e Meneses (1814–1879) a Portuguese colonial administrator, governor general of Cape Verde & MozambiqueAntónio Carneiro (1872–1930) a Portuguese painter, illustrator, poet and art professor. • Joaquim Pereira Teixeira de Vasconcelos (1877 in Amarante - 1952), a poet, pen name Teixeira de Pascoaes. He was nominated five times for the Nobel Prize in Literature. • Artur Carlos de Barros Basto (1887–1961), soldier and writer about Judaism. • Amadeo de Souza-Cardoso (1887–1918) a Portuguese modernist painter • Augusto Casimiro (1889–1967) a Portuguese journalist, poet and political commentator. • Agustina Bessa-Luís, (1922–2019) a Portuguese writer of novels • António Marinho e Pinto (born 1950 in Vila Chã do Marão) lawyer, journalist and politician • Francisco Assis (born 1965) a Portuguese politician, former MEP & mayor of Amarante Sport Mário Delgado (born 1924) an equestrian competed at the 1960 Summer OlympicsAntónio José Alves Ribeiro (born 1965), known as Tozé, is a Portuguese retired footballer with 330 club caps • Nuno Gomes (born 1976) a former footballer with 463 club caps and 79 for PortugalRicardo Carvalho (born 1978) a retired footballer with 433 club caps and 89 for Portugal ==International Relations==
International Relations
Twin towns — Sister cities Amarante is twinned with: • Achères, France (1997) • Wiesloch, Germany (2003) Amarante was previously twinned in 1985 with Châteauneuf-sur-Loire, France, but this relationship is dormant as of 2025. ==References==
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