Ponta Delgada (district)
Ponta Delgada | |
Distrito Autónomo de Ponta Delgada | |
District | |
The district capital of Ponta Delgada, located on the island of São Miguel | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Province | Ilhas Adjacentes |
Region | Azores |
Municipalities | Lagoa, Ponta Delgada, Povoação, Nordeste, Ribeira Grande, Vila Franca do Campo, Vila do Porto |
Highest point | Pico da Vara |
- location | São Miguel |
- elevation | 1,103 m (3,619 ft) |
- coordinates | PT 37°48′35″N 25°12′51″W / 37.80972°N 25.21417°W |
Area | 800 km2 (309 sq mi) |
Established | 1835 |
- Extinguished | 22 August 1975 |
Autonomous District | District Administration |
- location | Convent of Conceição, Ponta Delgada, Ilhas Adjacentes (Azores) |
Civil Governor[1] | António Borges Coutinho |
Timezone | Azores (UTC-1) |
- summer (DST) | Azores (UTC0) |
The District of Ponta Delgada was a district of the Ilhas Adjacentes (the former collective name for the Azores and Madeira), consisting of the dependent eastern islands of the Azores, located in the Atlantic Ocean. The district of Ponta Delgada, not to be confused with the modern municipality of Ponta Delgada, existed from 1835 until 1976 when it was abolished in the favour of the autonomy charter of the 1975 Portuguese Constitution.
History
By decree, on 18 July 1835, Mouzinho da Silveira established the districts of the Ilhas Adjacentes as part of his administrative reforms of local government. The provinces were extinguished, and the administrative and fiscal districts were created that included the eastern and western groups of islands: centred on Angra do Heroísmo and Ponta Delgada. This was followed in 1833 by an independence movement by the recently promoted centre of Horta, forcing by 28 March 1836 division the Azorean territory into three districts. During this process Ponta Delgada did not change, and remained defined by the two eastern islands and islets of the Formigas.[2]
During the Estado Novo regime of António de Oliveira Salazar the region obtained a level of districtal autonomy, especially after 1940.
Following the Hot Summer of 1975, a protest in the centre of Ponta Delgada, comprising property-owners and farmers challenged the government of António Borges Coutinho, who was charged with implementing land reforms after the Carnation Revolution. The Micalense Farmers' Protest, forced his resignation, and inspired a series of terrorist acts that plunged the Azores into political turmoil. After a round-up of arrests and detentions by the Military Governor, the Autonomous District of Ponta Delgada was extinguished, along with the other districts (Horta and Angra do Heroísmo) on 22 August 1975, with the establishment of theJunta Regional dos Açores (Regional Junta of the Azores), the provisional government that assumed the competencies of the administration during the region's transition to constitutional autonomy.
With regional autonomy, the districts were completely abolished: the 1976 Portuguese constitution defined in law the status of Autonomous Region without the existence of districts. Local government authority and administration fell to the upper-level Local Administrative Units(the municipalities) and second-tier LAU IIs (the civil parishes).
Geography
The district covered about 800 km² and included the two islands of Santa Maria and São Miguel and the small islets of the Formigas. It included the seven municipalities of:
- Lagoa
- Nordeste
- Ponta Delgada (former capital)
- Povoação
- Ribeira Grande
- Vila Franca do Campo
- Vila do Porto
References
- Notes
- ↑ Last civil governor of the District of Ponta Delgada
- ↑ Estatísticas Históricas Portuguesas, INE 2001
- Sources
- Machado, José Joaquim Ferreira (29 April 2005), A administração municipal de Ponta Delgada nos primórdios da autonomia (1896-1910) (PDF) (in Portuguese), Ponta Delgada (Azores), Portugal: University of the Azores