Carvoeiro | ||
Praia de Carvoeiro | ||
Former civil parish | ||
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Official name: Freguesia de Carvoeiro | ||
Country | Portugal | |
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Region | Algarve | |
Subregion | Algarve | |
District | Faro | |
Municipality | Lagoa | |
Center | Carvoeiro | |
- coordinates | 37°06′N 08°28′W / 37.100°N 8.467°WCoordinates: 37°06′N 08°28′W / 37.100°N 8.467°W | |
Lowest point | Sea level | |
- location | Atlantic Ocean | |
- elevation | 0 m (0 ft) | |
Area | 11.66 km2 (5 sq mi) | |
Population | 2,721 (2011) | |
Density | 233/km2 (603/sq mi) | |
Timezone | WET (UTC0) | |
- summer (DST) | WEST (UTC+1) | |
Postal zone | 8400-508 | |
Area code & prefix | (+351) 282 XX XX XX | |
Patron saint | Nossa Senhora da Encarnação | |
Website: http://www.carvoeiro.com | ||
Geographic detail from CAOP (2010) produced by Instituto Geográfico Português (IGP) |
Carvoeiro, or more commonly Praia de Carvoeiro, is a town and a former civil parish in the municipality (concelho) of Lagoa, Algarve, Portugal. In 2013, the parish merged into the new parish Lagoa e Carvoeiro. The population in 2011 was 2,721, in an area of 11.66 km². It is located about 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) south of Lagoa.
Formed from a picturesque fishing village, with a long history of settlement, the parish slowly developed into a tourist area in the municipality of Lagoa, owing to its number of sand beaches protected by cliffs. There are vestiges of human settlement dating to the Roman occupation of the peninsula, as well as early naval activity in the area.
The region was historically unspared from frequent pirate and military assaults along the coast, with a number of naval battles occurring off the coast. Most notably, in 1544, a squadron of ships under D. Pedro da Cunha, battled the Turkish barbary coast pirate, Xarramet. From historical records, the earliest settlement originated in the name Caboiere, an old name for a hamlet of fishermen from the Islamic-medieval period. For most of its history, fishing was the mainstay of the local economy.
However, from the 1960s onward, tourism gradually became the economic base of the area, with many new hotels, apartment complexes, shops, roads, and significant improvements to infrastructures completed to attract visitors to the metropole. An insight into the effects of mass tourism on the Algarve, centred on Carvoeiro, was written by Patrick Swift, detailing the community before the arrival of mass tourism. Swift was an artist and long-time resident of Carvoeiro who founded Porches Pottery.
Carvoeiro became a separate/independent parish in 1985 and raised to the status of town on 19 April 2001.
Algar Seco, a few hundred meters along the coast east of the main square and beach, is a popular nature site where ocean wave erosion has carved out grottoes, islets and water-spouts.It is also renowned in the vicinity for prime marine life spotting. In 2011, local fishermen were left with protruding eyes at a sighting of the elusive blue whale (Balaenoptera musculus). More commonly, bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) are seen exploring the coastline in pods of up to 12, often trailing boats to seek amusement.
To the west of the town is the site of an old ruined fort, ordered built in 1670 as part of the coastal defenses of the Algarve. Only a gate survives. At the same site is the Shrine of Our Lady of the Incarnation, a chapel overlooking the sea, whose construction is said to have antedated the fort.