Fortaleza
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fortaleza | |||
Mucuripe Beach in Fortaleza | |||
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Nickname: Fortal | |||
Motto: "Fortitudine" | |||
Location of Fortaleza | |||
Country | Brazil | ||
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Region | Northeast | ||
State | Ceará | ||
Founded | April 13, 1726 (officially) | ||
Government | |||
- Mayor | Luizianne Lins (PT) | ||
Area | |||
- City | 313.8 km² (121.1 sq mi) | ||
Elevation | 21 m (68.9 ft) | ||
Population (2006)[1] | |||
- City | 2,416,920 | ||
- Density | 7,587.68/km² (19,611/sq mi) | ||
- Metro | 3,415,455 (93th) | ||
- Demonym | Fortalezense | ||
Time zone | UTC-3 (UTC-3) | ||
HDI (2000) | 0.786 – medium | ||
Website: Fortaleza, Ceará |
Fortaleza (Portuguese for fortress, pronounced [foxtaˈlezɐ]) is the state capital of Ceará, located in northeastern Brazil. With a population of over 3.4 million (metropolitan region), Fortaleza has an area of 313 km² (120.9 sq mi). To the north of the city lies the Atlantic Ocean; to the south are the cities of Pacatuba, Eusébio, Maracanaú and Itaitinga; to the east is the county of Aquiraz and the Atlantic Ocean; and to the west is the city of Caucaia. Residents of the city are known as Fortalezenses. The current mayor is Luizianne Lins. On Beira-mar Avenue, kiosks and restaurants offer cold drinks and regional seafood. At the handcraft fair, many stands show embroidery and leather work, as well as jewelry and regional food. Of the urban beaches in Fortaleza, Futuro is the most frequented and is characterized by restaurants along the beach, each one with its own musical style and decoration.
The statue of Iracema refers to the legend of the Indian which was depicted in a novel by José de Alencar. Mucuripe Beach holds the Lighthouse Museum. Opened in 1846, the lighthouse was active for 111 years, until it was closed in 1957. Dragão do Mar Art and Culture Center holds the Cearense Culture Memorial, the Contemporary Art Museum and Rubens de Azevedo Planetary, as well as movies and theaters. Besides this, many old warehouses were refurbished and became bars and restaurants surrounding the central area of town. There are cuisine and show options in the evening.
Nightlife includes bars, discos and restaurants, opened every day in the week, besides the characteristic comedy shows that have revealed nationally famous artists. An off-season carnival, Fortal, happens in Fortaleza, in July. With a remodeled structure in 2008, the event has parking lots, bleachers, boxes and food court. The event lasts 4 days and around 1.5 million people enjoy the nationally famous axé music bands. Fortaleza also stages music festivals in Brazil, such as Ceará Music. This yearly event includes local artists and international pop rock stars for 3 days. Around 25 thousand people enjoy the fun and several concerts, electronic music tents, and fashion shows.
The Pinto Martins International Airport connects Fortaleza with the major Brazilian cities and also operates international flights.
The city is home to the Federal University of Ceará.
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[edit] History
Fortaleza's history began on 2 February 1500, when Spaniard Vicente Pinzón landed in Mucuripe's cove and named the new land Santa Maria de la Consolación. Because of the Treaty of Tordesillas, the discovery was never officially sanctioned. Colonisation began when the Portuguese Pero Coelho de Souza constructed the Fortim de São Tiago in the estuary of Ceará River in 1603. Later, the Dutch occupied the Brazilian Northeast and founded the Fort Schoonenborch. When they were expelled from Ceará, the Portuguese renamed it to Fortaleza de Nossa Senhora da Assunção. In 1726, the town of the fort was raised to the condition of village. In 1799, the Province of Ceará was separated from the Province of Pernambuco and Fortaleza was chosen as its capital.
During the 19th century, Fortaleza consolidated as an urban center in Ceará, supported by the sprouting of cotton growing. With the increase of the direct navigational communications with Europe the Customs of Fortaleza was created in 1812. In 1824, the city became agitated with the revolutionaries of Confederation of the Equator. Between the years of 1846 and 1877, the city goes through a period of enrichment and improvement of the economic activities and urban infrastructures including the exportation of the cotton and the development of diverse workmanships, such as the creation of the 2 secondary school of the Ceará and Mucuripe Lighthouse in 1845, Santa Casa de Misericórdia de Fortaleza in 1861, Prainha Seminary in 1864, Public Library in 1867 and the Public transportation network in 1870, which began with the construction of Railroad of Baturité. In the decades of 1870 and 1880, a period referred to as abolitionism and republican movements culminated in the release of the slaves in the Ceará, on 25 March 1884. The literary movement Spiritual Bakery appeared in 1892 and pioneered the spreading of modern ideas in literature in Brazil. Other entities of the time included the Ceará Institute and Ceara's Academy of Letters established in 1887 and 1894 respectively.
In the twentieth century, Fortaleza underwent through big urban changes, with improvements and the rural exodus, and grows mostly happening towards the end of the decade of 1910 and becoming the seventh city in population of Brazil. In 1954, the first university of the city was, the UFC. Between the decades of 1950 and 1960, the city went through an economic expansion above 100% and began the more distant occupation of neighborhoods of the center. To the end of the years 70 begins its emergence as the future industrial center of the Northeast with the implementation of the Industrial District of Fortaleza. During the political opening after the Military Regime, the people elected the first woman mayor Will Dine, Maria Luiza and became the first city hall commanded by a leftist party. At the end of the century, the administration of the city hall and the city underwent diverse structural changes with the opening of several avenues, hospitals, cultural spaces and emerging as one of the main tourist destinations of the Northeast and of Brazil.
[edit] Geography
Climate chart for Fortaleza | |||||||||||
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J | F | M | A | M | J | J | A | S | O | N | D |
78
31
25
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108
31
25
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202
30
25
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238
30
25
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119
30
25
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101
30
24
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44
30
24
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25
30
24
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14
30
25
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8
31
25
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8
31
26
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20
31
26
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temperatures in °C • precipitation totals in mm source: MSN Weather |
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Imperial conversion
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[edit] Climate
Fortaleza has a typical tropical climate, with high temperatures and high relative humidity throughout the year. However, these conditions are usually relieved by pleasant winds blowing from the ocean. Average temperatures are not much different throughout the year. December and January are the warmest months, with a high of 31 °C (88 °F) and low of 25 °C (77 °F). Rainy season goes from February to May (locally called "winter" due to the rain, not the temperature). with average annual temperature of 27°C (80°F). The relative humidity in the air in Fortaleza is 77% with average annual rainfall of 1.378,3 mm.
[edit] Vegetation
Fortaleza has a Tropical forest. Rainforests are characterized by high rainfall, with definitions setting minimum normal annual rainfall between 2,000 mm (about 78 inches or 2 meters) and 1,700 mm (about 67 inches). The soil can be poor because high rainfall tends to leach out soluble nutrients. There are several common characteristics of tropical rainforest trees. Tropical rainforest species frequently possess one or more attributes not commonly seen in trees of higher latitudes or trees in drier conditions on the same latitude.
[edit] Demographics
According to a 2007 census conducted by IBGE, there were 3,427,000 people residing in the Metropolitan Region of Fortaleza. The population density was 7,587.68 inh./km². The last PNAD (National Research for Sample of Domiciles) census revealed the following numbers: 2,087,043 Multiracial people (63.2%), 1,199,450 White people (34.0%), 109,000 Black people (2.4%), 30,000 Asian or Amerindian people (0.4%).[2]
One of the main causes of the city's population growth throughout history was the period of droughts in the hinterland and the consequent escape to the capital city, known as rural exodus, as well as the search for better conditions of job and income. The city's population in the times of Colonial Brazil was estimated in 200 inhabitants, when Fortaleza was only an administrative unit, a village. The first discrepante point of the population growth of Fortaleza happened between 1865 and 1872 when the construction of the Railroad of Baturité was initiated. As a result of the demand for labour force, the population of the city swelled along with the economy. In 1877 another period of droughts made a great amount of homeless people migrate to Fortaleza and its outskirts. Migrations happened again during the droughts of 1888, 1900, 1915, 1932 and 1942. In these three last periods, concentration camps were set up in the hinterland to prevent the arrival of retirantes in the capital, however some surrounding districts like Pirambu and others -- most of which with high demographic rates -- began having their population grown due to migrations of peasants seduced by the promises of modernity in the greatest city of Ceará.
In 1922, Fortaleza reached its first hundred thousand inhabitants with the annexation of the cities of Messejana and Parangaba -- now important districts of the city. Parangaba itself had more than 20,000 inhabitants, probably because a railroad station was built there before Fortaleza could have one, which made it receive a great number of retirantes from the dry hinterlands.
During the years of 1964–1985 several changes took place in Fortaleza which made the city a central region for industries. Governor Virgílio Távora (1963 - 1966) initiated the implantation of Industrial District of Fortaleza (DIF I). One decade later, the city already had about a million inhabitants, [[Metropolitan area]s] were created Brazil (1973), making the city one of them. In 1983 DIF I started to integrate the territory of the new city of Maracanaú, which, just some years ago, was made again part of the Greater Fortaleza (the city's Metropolitan area).
In the [1980]s], Fortaleza overcomes Recife in population terms, becoming the second most populous city in Northeastern Brazil, with 1,308,919 inhabitants. Throughout the last decades of the 20th century the city “swelled” increasingly until its population exceeded two million inhabitants (in 2000). With a current population estimated in 2,458,545 inhabitants, Fortaleza is the 4th most populated city in Brazil, after São Paulo, Rio De Janeiro and Salvador.
[edit] Economy
The economy of Fortaleza has his bigger prescription (the GDP present is of R$ 15.79 billion)[3] arising from of the its commerce diversified. To main plaza is the most greatest Center concentrating number of commercial establishments. Another important pole of sale of the products industrialized in Fortitude is the Avenue Monseigneur Tabosa, near to the tourist pole of the Iracema beach. Exist in the several city shoppings among the biggest they have the Iguatemi, North Shopping, Aldeota, Del Paseo, and others, but still has, unfortunately, many problems of Sanitation and slums. The industry has in the output of footwear, products textiles, leathers, skins and sustenances, beyond the extraction of big minerals highlight in the local economy.
The GDP for the city was R$ 19,734,557,000 (2005).[4]
The per capita income for the city was R$ 8,309 (2005).[5]
[edit] Education
Portuguese is the official national language, and thus the primary language taught in schools. But English and Spanish are part of the official high school curriculum.
[edit] Educational institutions
Higher education in Fortaleza is provided by a vast number of public and private institutions. Fortaleza is home to some of the most important universities and research centres in northeast Brazil.
- Universidade Federal do Ceará (UFC), (public, federal, free of charge);
- Universidade Estadual do Ceará (UECE), (public, state-owned, free of charge);
- Centro Federal de Educação Tecnológica do Ceará (CEFET-CE), (public, federal, free of charge);
- Universidade de Fortaleza (UNIFOR), (main private university);
- Universidade do Vale do Acaraú (Uva), (private);
- Universidade Regional do Cariri (URCA);
- Faculdade Farias Brito (FFB);
- Faculdade Integrada do Ceará (FIC);
- Faculdade 7 de Setembro (FA7);
- Faculdade Christus
- Faculdades do Nordeste (FANOR)
- Faculdade Latino-Americana de Educação (FLATED)
- FGF
- Faculdade Ateneu (FATE)
- UNICE
- Faculdade Lourenço Filho
[edit] Culture
Since the end of the 19th century, the city has been home to various cultural institutions. The Instituto do Ceará (Ceará Institute) was established in 1887, and conducts research in history, geography and anthropology. The Academia Cearense de Letras (Cearense Academy of Letters) was the first institution of the sort in the country, established on August 15, 1894. In 1892, Fortaleza was the site of a cultural movement of literary expression called "Spiritual Bakery". There are many other cultural centers, such as the Banco do Nordeste Cultural Centre and the Dragão do Mar Center of Art and Culture.
The folklore of Fortaleza is rich and diverse, and has roots in a mixture of beliefs originating from white colonisers and native groups. Minor, but also considered important, are Syrian-Lebanese and African traditions. Some of the cultural manifestations are:
- Bumba-meu-boi or Boi-Ceará: songs and dances of a religious cult to the ox, with Portuguese roots.
- Torém: dance originated by the tremembés.
- Violeiros, cantadores and emboladores: musical manifestations expressing social criticism, has typical northeast origins.
- Maracatu: Dance and music, the Fortaleza maractu is of the Baque Virado or Nação lines and is celebrated during carnivals.
- Dança do coco: originated by Afro-Brazilians. On the beach it is just for men and in the hinterland it is danced in pairs.
[edit] Landmarks
Fortaleza is the home of numerous landmarks. They include:
- Teatro José de Alencar;
- Farol do Mucuripe;
- Fortaleza's Cathedral;
- Estátua de Iracema;
- Forte Nan de Praire Statue;
- Forte de Nossa Senhora da Assunção;
- Palácio da Luz.
[edit] Cuisine
Brazilian cuisine incluedes feijoada, churrasco, rice and beans. There are some dishes that are typical of the Northeast of Brazil, such as macaxeira, tapioca, carne de sol. The best restaurants in Fortaleza in 2005, as ranked by Veja magazine, were[6]:
- Best restaurant in Fortaleza: Alimenta Bistrô;
- Best Regional Food: Colher de Pau;
- Best Italian restaurant: Pulcinella;
- Best French restaurant: Lautrec;
- Best Japanese restaurant: Kingyo;
- Best Pizza: Vignoli;
- Best Beef: Santa Grelha;
- Best Fish and Seafood: Milmar;
- Best Feijoada: Mucuripe Grill.
[edit] Tourism and recreation
The warm climate, warm ocean waters and the sandy beaches attract tourists. In recent years, many of the old hotels have been replaced by European-owned international resorts. Nightlife is full of festivities with bars, restaurants and shows as the primary attraction. The city is known for having the "wildest Monday nights in the world"[7]. Some of the best bars and clubs are found near Dragão do Mar Center of Art and Culture. The Praia de Iracema (Iracema's beach), the first urban nuclei of the city, is home to many bars and restaurants. It includes the Ponte dos Ingleses (Bridge of the Englishmen) which is an ideal location for watching the sunset and spotting dolphins.
Fortaleza's urban beaches have warm waters. The scenery is complemented by the jangadas (small rafts used by many of Ceará's fishermen) for catching seafood for the Ceará cuisine. The Praia do Futuro (Beach of the Future) is a popular location with many beachside restaurants, built in the local style using carnauba straw and called "Barracas de Praia" (Beach Huts).
[edit] Urban beaches in Fortaleza
Fortaleza has about 25 km (15 mi) of urban beaches. From North to South, the urban beaches of Fortaleza are Iracema, Meireles, Mucuripe and Praia do Futuro. Each beach has its own peculiarities.
Iracema is the bohemian beach. Partiers (locals and tourists alike) start to gather in the afternoon and stay until the morning. For example, the Cultural Center Dragão do Mar and the night club Pirata are in Iracema, amidst a profusion of restaurants and bars.
Meireles is where locals and tourists go to stroll, bring their children to the several play grounds, drink a coconut, sit down and watch people passing by. The "feirinha de artesanato" (handicraft marke) is in Meireles. Meireles is also the area with the highest number of hotels in Fortaleza.
Mucuripe is the place of jangadas. Still used by fishermen to go into high seas, jangadas can be seen along the way during the afternoon and evenings, and returning from the sea in the morning; part of the catch of the day is sold in an old style fish market. Also, the boat trips leave from this area.
Praia do Futuro is about 7 km long, and is the preferred one for bathing and surfing. Praia do Futuro was made famous by its barracas (rustic restaurants built on the beach sand), which offer excellent food and local musical shows.
[edit] Infrastructure
[edit] International Airport
The Pinto Martins International Airport is the main airport of the city. The passenger terminal is air conditioned and has four levels. The basement level has parking for 1,000 cars as well as automatic teller machines and a stop for regular city buses.
The ground level has 31 check-in counters, airline offices, car rental agencies, special tourist information, a juvenile court bureau to facilitate travel of minors, a National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC) office, information counter, passenger arrival area and access to two taxi stops.
The second level contains shops, a food court and domestic and international boarding lounges. The top floor has a beer garden and panoramic deck overlooking the maneuvering apron with a view of the Fortaleza skyline. The apron is 152,857 square meters and can accommodate 14 aircraft at once in pre-established positions (“boxes”).
The scheduled airlines operating out of Fortaleza are Cabo Verde Airlines (code-sharing with TAP), TAM, Varig, Vasp and TAP. The airport also frequently receives domestic and international charter flights. The passenger terminal, opened in 1998, was designed to have a useful life of 50 years. The former terminal, called the General Aviation Terminal, is now used for general aviation and the fire brigade. The control tower is located alongside.
Construction of a cargo terminal is the next big step planned by Infraero. The new terminal will have roughly eight thousand square meters, boosting the cargo storage and handling capacity fourfold. Plans then call for the new terminal to be integrated with highway and railroad links.
[edit] Roads
Fortaleza's road traffic is monitored and controlled by a system of intelligent semaphores, traffic cameras, and Led Light Message Boards. This system is known by the acronym CTAFOR wich stands for "Controle de Tráfego em Área de Fortaleza" (portuguese for Area Traffic Control of Fortaleza ).
Streets in Fortaleza have poor pavement in many areas. Tourists should be advised to drive carefully in order to avoid Fortaleza's many potholes.
[edit] Distances
- Natal: 533 km (331 mi);
- Teresina: 634 km (393 mi);
- João Pessoa: 688 km (427 mi);
- Recife: 799 km (496 mi);
- São Luís: 1070 km (664 mi);
- Salvador: 1403 km (871 mi);
- Rio de Janeiro: 2838 km (1763 mi);
- São Paulo: 3144 km (1953 mi).
[edit] Urban Train
The city's railroad system is part of the Brazilian Company of Urban Trains (CBTU) and links Fortaleza to three other cities. It is used mainly by people from distant metropolitan areas (e.g., Maracanaú), since it is rather old and poorly maintained, and does not meet the demands of inner city commuters. Therefore, a new underground system known as MetroFor has been engineered by the state government. After years of delay and interruptions, the plans have been recently resumed, with the improvement of existing lines and construction of new underground stations. It is expected to be finished by 2010. Currently, a total of 22 stations are in operation: 13 in the south line and eight in the west line beyond the central station. 14 new stations are yet to be added to the system, three of which will be subterranean, as a part of the restructuring effort.
[edit] Port
The Port of Fortaleza is located an artificial port located in the Mucuripe inlet. The quay is 1,054 meters wide. It contains an exclusive-mooring platform for oil-producing. Its warehouse area is six thousand square meters wide and offers more than 100 thousand square meters for container placing. It also contains two wheat mills and is interconnected to the railway system by an extensive maneuver area.
[edit] Neighborhoods
List of neighborhoods in Fortaleza:
- Aerolândia
- Aeroporto
- Alagadiço
- Alagadiço Novo
- Aldeota
- Alto da Balança
- Álvaro Weyne
- Amadeu Furtado
- Acuri
- Antônio Bezerra
- Autran Nunes
- Barra do Ceará
- Barroso
- Bela Vista
- Benfica
- Bom Futuro
- Bom Jardim
- Bom Sucesso
- Cais do Porto
- Cajazeiras
- Cambeba
- Canindezinho
- Carlito Pamplona
- Castelão
- Centro
- Cidade 2000
- Cidade dos Funcionários
- Coaçu
- Cocó
- Conjunto Ceará
- Conjunto Cearazinho
- Conjunto Esperança
- Conjunto Palmeiras
- Couto Fernandes
- Cristo Redentor
- Curió
- Damas
- Demócrito Rocha
- Dende
- Dionísio Torres
- Dias Macedo
- Dom Lustosa
- Dunas
- Édson Queirós
- Eng Luciano Cavalcante
- Farias Brito
- Fátima
- Floresta
- Genibaú
- Granja Lisboa
- Granja Portugal
- Guajeru
- Guararapes
- Henrique Jorge
- Itaoca
- Itaperi
- Jacarecanga
- Jangurussu
- Jardim América
- Jardim Cearense
- Jardim das Oliveiras
- Jardim Guanabara
- Jardim Iracema
- João XXIII
- Joaquim Távora
- Jóquei Clube
- José Bonifácio
- Lagoa Redonda
- Manuel Sátiro
- Maraponga
- Mata Galinha
- Meireles
- Messejana
- Mondubim
- Monte Castelo
- Montese
- Moura Brasil
- Mucuripe
- Padre Andrade
- Panamericano (Fortaleza)
- Papicu
- Parangaba
- Parque Araxá
- Parque Dois Irmãos
- Parque Iracema
- Parque Manibaú
- Parquelândia
- Parreão
- Passaré
- Paupina
- Pedras
- Pici
- Pirambu
- Praia de Iracema
- Praia do Futuro
- Prefeito José Válter
- Presidente Kennedy
- Presidente Vargas
- Quintino Cunha
- Rodolfo Teófilo
- Sabiaquaba
- Salinas
- Santa Rosa
- São Gerardo
- São João do Tauapé
- São José
- Sapiranga
- Serrinha
- Siqueira
- Varjota
- Vicente Pinzón
- Vila Eleri
- Vila Peri
- Vila União
- Vila Velha
[edit] Sports
The most popular sport in Fortaleza, like the rest of Brazil, is Soccer. The main games of the Ceará State Championship are played in Fortaleza. There are several association football (soccer) clubs in Fortaleza. The most important ones are Ceará SC, Fortaleza EC and Ferroviário AC. Ceará Club and Fortaleza Club belong to Brazilian Soccer Championship's second league, while Ferroviário plays in the 3rd league. Fortaleza is one of the 18 remaining candidates to host games of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.
Beisdes Soccer, Fortaleza is also home to nautical sports. Strong winds make Praia do Futuro beach an excellent place for this kind of practice. Fortaleza commonly hosts world competitions of surfing, windsurfing and kitesurfing. Additionally, Fortaleza is a natural brewer of high-level athletes in combat sports, as evidenced by several Fortalezans' recent success in mixed martial arts.[8] Only a 30 minutes drive from Fortaleza there is the center of Kitesurfing , Cumbuco. Great wind from June till February. [9]
[edit] Famous Fortalezenses
- Alberto Nepomuceno
- Hélder Câmara
- Humberto de Alencar Castello Branco
- José de Alencar
- Karim Aïnouz
- Mário Jardel
- Rachel de Queiroz
- Shelda Bede
- Hermes Franca
[edit] Sister cities
[edit] Gallery
[edit] References
- ^ Estimativas das Populações Residentes, em 01.07.2006, Segundo os Municípios (Portuguese). IBGE. Retrieved on 2006-09-01.
- ^ (2007) Síntese de Indicadores Sociais 2007 (PDF) (in Portuguese), Fortaleza, Brazil: IBGE. ISBN 85-240-3919-1. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ Produto Interno Bruto dos Municípios 2004 (Portuguese). IBGE. Retrieved on 2007-09-18.
- ^ (2005) GDP (PDF) (in Portuguese), Fortaleza, Brazil: IBGE, 21. ISBN 85-240-3919-1. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ (2005) per capita income (PDF) (in Portuguese), Fortaleza, Brazil: IBGE. ISBN 85-240-3919-1. Retrieved on 2007-07-18.
- ^ Best restaurants in Fortaleza
- ^ Pirata and the souled-out dancers (English). Trace (magazine). Retrieved on 2000-06-27.
- ^ Move Over Rio, Make Room for Fortaleza (English). MMAPredictions. Retrieved on 2007-07-16.
- ^ Cumbuco.com the largest english portal for Cumbuco
[edit] External links
Find more about Fortaleza on Wikipedia's sister projects: | |
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Dictionary definitions | |
Textbooks | |
Quotations | |
Source texts | |
Images and media | |
News stories | |
Learning resources |
[edit] Official websites
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza City Hall home page
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza City Council home page
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza Tourism Office home page
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza Metro Underground home page
[edit] Other websites
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza Convention & Visitors Bureau
- (English) Fortaleza Beaches
- (English) Visit Fortaleza
- (Portuguese) Guide of Websites in Fortalza
- (English) Brazil Info Fortaleza Guide
- (English) Fortaleza beach
- (Portuguese) Fortaleza Guide
- (Dutch) Informatie en Bezienswaardigheden in Fortaleza
- Fortaleza is at coordinates Coordinates:
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