Aracruz, Espírito Santo

Aracruz
Município de Aracruz
Municipality

Putiri Beach, Aracruz, Espírito Santo

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Location of Aracruz in Espírito Santo
Aracruz

Location of Aracruz in Brazil

Coordinates: 19°49′12″S 40°16′22″W / 19.82000°S 40.27278°W / -19.82000; -40.27278Coordinates: 19°49′12″S 40°16′22″W / 19.82000°S 40.27278°W / -19.82000; -40.27278
Country Brazil
Region Southeast
Espírito Santo
Founded April 3, 1848
Government
  Mayor Marcelo de Souza Coelho (PDT, 2013–2016)
Area
  Total 1,423.87 km2 (549.76 sq mi)
Population (2014)
  Total 93,325
  Density 66/km2 (170/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Aracruzense
Time zone BRT (UTC-3)
Website pma.es.gov.br

Aracruz is a municipality at the central coast of Espírito Santo, Brazil. It covers 1,423.87 km2 (549.76 sq mi), and has a population of 93,325 with a population density of 66 inhabitants per square kilometer.[1]

History

The municipality's history begins in 1556, when two Jesuit priests (Braz Lourenço and Diogo Jácomo) founded Santa Cruz, a town then called Aldeia Nova (New Village). Aldeia Nova later became known as Aldeia Velha (Old Village), since it didn't prosper as much as its neighbour, which then became known as Aldeia Nova, and is today called Nova Almeida. Aldeia Velha became emancipated as a municipality in 1848, and changed its name to Santa Cruz. In 1943, the municipality and its capital were both renamed Aracruz. However, the biggest economic driver at the time was jacarandá wood, and Sauaçu held most of the wood processing plants (serrarias), so in 1948 the capital was moved to Sauaçu (also called Sauassu), and the capital's name went with it. Sauaçu then became known as Aracruz, and Aracruz reverted to its formal and present name, Santa Cruz.

Santa Cruz was founded at the mouth of the Piraquê-mirim and Piraquê-açu Rivers, as were a number of Amerindian tribes. After a visit from the Emperor Peter II who slept in Santa Cruz in 1860, he signed permission for 386 Italian families to settle in Santa Cruz, and those families founded Fazenda Nova Trento (New Trento Farm) around 1874. Other groups moved up the Piraquê-açu river to found Palmas Farm (Fazenda das Palmas) and Santa Teresa. At this time coffee and cassava plantations were common.

Another large wave of Italian immigrants began coming around 1872, when a ship called Sofia arrived bringing 386 Italians from the region of Trento. Those went on to found Nova Trento Colony.

Population

Today Aracruz is home to roughly 1500 Amerindians divided into six reservations: Caieiras Velha, Comboios, Irajá, Pau Brasil, Tekoá and Três Palmeiras. Only in the last couple of decades have they been able to secure their land here, as many problems with local paper industry greatly prolonged their land struggles. Those Indians are of two tribes: the Tupiniquim and the Guarani. The Indians in Aracruz Municipality no longer speak their native languages, but they hold on to their traditional subsistence farming and handcraft trade.

References

  1. "Aracruz" (in Portuguese). Brasília, Brazil: Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatstica. 2015. Retrieved 2015-09-02.
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