Curral das Freiras | |
Civil Parish | |
The village of Curral das Freiras
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Official name: Freguesia do Curral das Freiras | |
Name origin: Portuguese for valley of the nuns | |
Country | Portugal |
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Region | Madeira |
Island | Madeira |
Municipality | Câmara de Lobos |
Center | Curral das Freiras |
- elevation | 461 m (1,512 ft) |
- coordinates | 32°43′12″N 16°58′11″W / 32.72000°N 16.96972°WCoordinates: 32°43′12″N 16°58′11″W / 32.72000°N 16.96972°W |
Area | 25.03 km2 (10 sq mi) |
Population | 2,001 (2011) |
Density | 80/km2 (207/sq mi) |
Settlement | c. 1462 |
- Parish | c. 1780 |
- Civil Parish | 17 March 1790 |
LAU | Junta Freguesia |
- location | Estrada Cónego Camacho, 7B |
President Junta | Adelino Norberto de Sá Santos (PPD-PSD) |
President Assembleia | Gregório Reis Fernandes Canhas (PPD-PSD) |
Timezone | WET (UTC0) |
- summer (DST) | WEST (UTC+1) |
ISO 3166-2 code | PT- |
Postal Zone | 9030-319 |
Area Code & Prefix | (+351) 291 XXX XXX |
Patron Saint | Nossa Senhora do Livramento |
Location of the parish seat of Curral das Freiras in the municipality of Câmara de Lobos, island of Madeira
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Website: www |
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Geographic detail from CAOP (2010) produced by Instituto Geográfico Português (IGP) |
Curral das Freiras ("Valley of the Nuns") is a civil parish in the municipality of Câmara de Lobos in the Portuguese archipelago of Madeira. The population in 2011 was 2,001, in an area of 25.03 km². It is situated in the mountainous interior of the island. Being one of the more distant locations from the municipal seat of Câmara de Lobos, it is geographically isolated from other communities by the cliffs and peaks surrounding its central valley. A tunnel southwards in the direction of Funchal now offers safe access to the valley.
Initially, during its early settlement access to the valley of Curral was difficult, and was only attempted by semi-nomadic shepherds and slaves who gained their emancipation or escaped from servitude. These people built small homes, and a small hamlet developed towards the end of the 15th century. More permanent residents began to dwell in the valley shortly after, although the area remained little developed.
The settlement was part of the dominion of João Gonçalves Zarco, who granted its use for cultivation around 1462 to João Ferreira and his wife Branca Dias. These settlers later donated their lands to their grandchild Branca Teixeira, on 22 August 1474. On 11 September 1480, the lands were, once again, sold to the second Captain-Donatório, João Gonçalves da Câmara (Zarco´s son), who in turn donated it the Convento of Santa Clara in the name of his daughter Elvira and Joana who lived in the convent.
During early colonization, the settlement was simply known as Curral or Curral da Serra (English: corral or English: corral of the mountains), because it was known for its extensive pasture-lands, used for grazing cattle and small herds (sheep and goats). The name was subsequently altered, when these lands became the property of the nuns of the Convent of Santa Clara (between 1492 and 1497). There is also some discrepancy; others credit the name change after 1566, when the nuns of the Convent took refuge on these properties, during the French privateer attacks on Funchal.
The lands of Curral das Freiras were part of the parish of Santo António, but, owing to its extreme isolation from this ecclesiastical seat, the religious parish of Curral das Freiras was instituted in 1780. Later, on 17 March 1790, by regal charter (from Queen Maria I, Curral das Freiras became an independent parish, separating from Santo António.
Situated in a deep valley and encircled by steep mountain slopes, the parish of Curral das Freiras is located 29 kilometres from the municipal seat of Câmara de Lobos. Most of the buildings in the parish overlook the main valley, with the steep hillsides encircling the parish used for the cultivation of cherries and grapes used in the production of Madeira wine.