Santa Maria Maior (Funchal)

Santa Maria Maior
Civil Parish
The differentiated landscape of Madeira: the urbanized coastal buildings of Santa Maria Maior situated in a mountainous geography
Official name: Freguesia da Santa Maria Maior
Name origin: Portuguese for Saint Mary the Great
Country  Portugal
Region  Madeira
Island Madeira
Municipality Funchal
Center Santa Maria Maior
 - elevation 282 m (925 ft)
 - coordinates 32°39′38″N 16°53′29″W / 32.66056°N 16.89139°W / 32.66056; -16.89139Coordinates: 32°39′38″N 16°53′29″W / 32.66056°N 16.89139°W / 32.66056; -16.89139
Lowest point
 - elevation 0 m (0 ft)
Area 4.86 km2 (2 sq mi)
Population 13,352 (2011)
Density 2,747 / km2 (7,115 / sq mi)
Settlement c. 1425
 - Parish 18 November 1557
 - Civil Parish 25 April 1976
LAU Junta Freguesia
 - location Rua das Murteiras
President Junta Alberto Rufino Fernandes Casimiro (PPD-PSD)
President Assembleia Maria Antonina Mourato Talhinhas Teixeira (PPD-PSD)
Timezone WET (UTC0)
 - summer (DST) WEST (UTC+1)
Postal Zone 9060-199
Area Code & Prefix (+351) 291 XXX XXX
Patron Saint Santa Maria
Location of the parish seat of Santa Maria Maior in the municipality of Funchal, island of Madeira
Wikimedia Commons: Santa Maria Maior (Funchal)
Website: http://www.jf-stamariamaior.pt

Santa Maria Maior (Portuguese meaning Saint Mary the Great) is a civil parish in the eastern part of the municipality of Funchal on the island of Madeira. The population in 2011 was 13,352,[1] in an area of 4.86 km².[2]

History

The walled fortifications of the Fort of São Tiago, built to protect the coast from piracy during the 16th-17th century

From the initial founding of Funchal, the island of Madeira was peppered with small settlements along the coasts near access to the sea. The settlement that would later take on the name of Santa Maria Maior developed spontaneously from the first homes constructed in 1425.[3] This aglomeration extended from Ribeira do João Gomes until Corpo Santo, along the beachfront, and concentrated around a small temple constructed to the invokation of Santa Maria, or Santa Maria do Calhau as it was briefly known. Santa Maria do Calhau, constructed in 1430, served the congregations east of the bay of Funchal, and was also known as Nossa Senhora da Conceição de Baixo (English: Our Lady of the Conception), or simply Santa Maria Maior.[3] The chapel was the seat of the parish of Santa Maria Maior until 1508, when the Church of the Sé Catedral was completed, and the parishioners were obligated to transfer there for services. Santa Maria Maior was the first parish to be instituted in Funchal. Its name was given, as some historians believe, because it was constructed in larger proportions than the chapel consecrated in the name of Nossa Senhora da Conceição ordered built by João Gonçalves Zarco (on the present site of the Church of Santa Clara).[3] Zarco's chapel was known as Nossa Senhora da Conceição de Cima (meaning, geographically, top for its location), in opposition to Nossa Senhora da Conceição de Baixo (which means "bottom"), but referred to as Nossa Senhora do Calhau, because it was built on the coast (calhau is Portuguese for rock-covered beaches, typical of the Azores and Madeira).[3]

The Church of Nossa Senhora do Calhau was destroyed, various times, by storm surges that battered the southern coast, eventually forcing many to concentrate in central Funchal, forming the central agglomeration of that municipality.[3] Meanwhile, the construction of the Sé Catedral resulted in a dramatic population growth, and Santa Maria Maior lost its role as the parish seat to Sé.[3] In 1557, Santa Maria Maior is divided into two individual parishes: Sé, seat in the Sé Cathedral and Santa Maria Maior, whose seat remained at the Church of Nossa Senhora do Calhau. On 18 November 1557, in accord with ecclesiastical authorities, the parish of Santa Maria Maior was established: its head was the vicar António Mourão.[3]

Socially, the population was dominated by artisans and "men of office", although subsistence agriculture was important.[3]

After an alluvial flood in 1803, that destroyed a great part of the Church of Nossa Senhora do Calhau, the parish seat moved to the Church of São Tiago (who had become the patron saint of Funchal).[4] Finally, the ruins of the chapel were demolished in 1835, so that in its place (at the beginning of the Rua de Santa Maria Maior) was possible the construction of the Mercado da União (English: Union Market), which too was later removed in 1911.[3]

In 1851 the Jewish Cemetery of Funchal was built in Rua do Lazareto, which still exists today.

Santa Maria Maior too was influenced by the evolution of the economic cycles, primarily wheat, suger and wine, which developed the island in successive decades.[3]

The administration of the parish remained under the ecclesiastical administration of the church, and through parish commissioners, who were later substituted by magistrates who were proposed by the municipal council.[3]

Geography

Santa Maria Maior, along the coast, showing the rugged escarpments of Madeira

It is located about 3 km east of the urban centre of Funchal, 4.5 km southwest Camacha and only 3 km west Caniço. The area is an urbanized section of the municipality of Funchal linked by ancillary roads to other sections of the island, as well as roadway that extends across the island. Until the mid-20th century, much of the interior of this parish was pasture and agricultural lands (central and western section), with denser forest in the northeast and northwest. The encroachment of urban housing, especially after the Carnation Revolution resulted in a transformation of this area into an ancillary bedroom community of Funchal.

References

Notes
  1. Instituto Nacional de Estatística
  2. Eurostat
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "História da junta de freguesia de Santa Maria Maior" (in Portuguese). Santa Maria Maior, Funchal (Madeira), Portugal: Junta Freguesia da Santa Maria Maior. 2011. Retrieved 03-02-2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. The change patron saint is still remembered in Funchal with the Procissão do Voto da Fé e Penitência (English: Procession and Allegiance of Faith and Penitence), which was instituted in memorial to deaths sustained in many great epidemics over the years.
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