Prudentópolis | |
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Municipality | |
Entrance to Prudentópolis.
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Location in Brazil | |
Coordinates: 25°12′46″S 50°58′40″W / 25.21278°S 50.97778°W | |
Country | Brazil |
Region | Southern |
State | Paraná |
Mesoregion | Sudeste Paranaense |
Population (2008) | |
• Total | 50,614 |
Time zone | UTC -3 |
Prudentópolis (Ukrainian: Прудентополіс) is a Brazilian municipality in the state of Paraná, in Southern Brazil. As of 2008, it had a population of 50,614 people.
It is the center of the Ukrainian community in Brazil.
Moreover, the town is surrounded by 100 waterfalls, which attract as well many tourists.
In 1882, the project of the construction of roads in central Paraná attracted the first families to the region. Firmo Mendes de Queiroz, descended from Bandeirantes, settled there, living on agriculture. He built a chapel, giving birth to a place called "Vilinha" (Little Village) by its inhabitants. In 1894, the government decided to colonize the region of São João do Capanema. Cândido Ferreira de Abreu, the owner of this colony, decided to change its name to Prudentópolis, in honor to Brazilian president Prudente de Morais. In 1895, to settle this region, 1,500 Ukrainian families, about 8,000 people, came to Prudentópolis. This immigration continued until the 1920s.
Nowadays, Prudentópolis is home to the largest population of Ukrainian descent in Brazil (75% of its inhabitants). Other ethnic groups that make up its population are Italians, Poles and Germans.
The Ukrainian culture is still preserved by its inhabitants: the Ukrainian language is taught in local schools and used a liturgical language and there are typically Ukrainian constructions.
The Ukrainian Catholic particular church, which used the Byzantine Rite in Ukrainian language, has there the Catedral Ucraniana Nossa Senhora da Imaculada Conceição, cathedral episcopal see of an eparchy (diocese), the Ukrainian Catholic Eparchy of Imaculada Conceição in Prudentópolis. It is (the sole) suffragan of the Metropolitan Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of São João Batista em Curitiba, who heads the only proper Eastern rite ecclesiastical province in Brazil.