Achadinha

Achadinha
Civil Parish
Official name: Freguesia da Achadinha
Name origin: Portuguese for small flatland
Country  Portugal
Autonomous Region  Azores
Island São Miguel
Municipality Nordeste
Center Achadinha
 - elevation 173 m (568 ft)
 - coordinates 37°50′59″N 25°17′11″W / 37.84972°N 25.28639°WCoordinates: 37°50′59″N 25°17′11″W / 37.84972°N 25.28639°W
Highest point Lameiros
 - location Planalto dos Gramihais
 - elevation 925 m (3,035 ft)
 - coordinates 37°47′56″N 25°15′20″W / 37.79889°N 25.25556°W
Area 12.41 km2 (5 sq mi)
 - urban .33 km2 (0 sq mi)
Population 535 (2011)
Density 43 / km2 (111 / sq mi)
LAU Junta Freguesia
 - location Rua Mangana
 - elevation 168 m (551 ft)
 - coordinates 37°51′10″N 25°16′58″W / 37.85278°N 25.28278°W
President Junta Armando Correia Vicente
President Assembleia João Carlos Cordeiro Cabral
Timezone Azores (UTC-1)
 - summer (DST) Azores (UTC0)
Postal Zone 9630-043
Area Code & Prefix (+351) 292 XX XX XX
Patron Saint Nossa Senhora do Rosário
Location of the civil parish of Achandinha, within the municipality of Nordeste
Wikimedia Commons: Achadinha
Website: http://www.achadinha.net/
Geographic detail from CAOP (2010)[1] produced by Instituto Geográfico Português (IGP)

Achadinha (from Achada + diminutive -inha, meaning Little Achada) is a civil parish in the municipality of Nordeste in the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores. The population in 2011 was 535,[2] in an area of 12.41 km².[3]

History

Achadinha is one of the oldest localities in the municipality of Nordeste, referred to be Gaspar Frutuoso in his chronicle, Saudades da Terra. The settlement of this region dates to the early colonization of the island, when a man from Serra da Estrela region of northern Portugal established a stake along the northern coast. This man constructed a farm and cleared a roadway, that grew to become the principal link to this parish.

Around the 16th century, Achadinha was inhabited by 123 people in 43 homes. During this century, a small temple was constructed to the invocation of Nossa Senhora do Rosário (Our Lady of the Rosary), who was served by its first vicar Pêro Vieira. By the end of the 19th century, the small chapel was substituted by a three-nave church.

Achadinha, during the 17th century, was still little more than a small settlement, distant and isolated from the great centres, such as Vila Franca do Campo and Ponta Delgada. This was a land where isolation was commonplace, the winters strong and the people lived off of the land. Many of the inhabitants walked barefoot, wearing shabby rags, made of linen, in a region that was distant from any other centre.

In the first years of the 18th century, a medical surgeon named Dionísio Marcondes (born in Venice, Italy) married Maria Vieira, daughter of Manuel Váz Cogumbreiro on 6 December 1709.

It was in Achadinha that Liberal forces disembarked during the Liberal Wars, under the command of the General Count of Vila Flor.

Geography

Achadinha is located east of Ribeira Grande, along the northern coast of São Miguel, between its neighbours Salga in the west and Achada in the east. Located northeast of the island capital (Ponta Delgada) along the path of the Regional Roadway E.R.1-1ª, that encircles the island; it lies between the municipal seats of Nordeste and Ribeira Grande, with the central mountains towards the interior and the Atlantic Ocean to the north.

Economy

Remotely, the inhabitants of the parish dedicated their work to the cultivation of wheat, corn, beats and potato. The parish diversified its activities, but deviated little from its agriculture and animal husbandry, with the production of milk and beef cattle.

Architecture

References

  1. IGP, ed. (2010), Carta Administrativa Oficial de Portugal (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Instituto Geográfico Português, retrieved 1 July 2011
  2. Instituto Nacional de Estatística
  3. Eurostat
  4. Noé, Paula (2012), SIPA, ed., Igreja Paroquial de Achadinha/Igreja de Nossa Senhora do Rosário (PT072102020005) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 5 November 2012