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Timeline of São Vicente, Cape Verde

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The following is a timeline of the island of Santiago, Cape Verde.

Prehistoric era

  • Up to about 5,000 years ago: The island was larger and compromised an estimate size of 1,500 km2 of land, the name of the island that included Santo Antão and Santa Luzia and two other islets was likely called the "Northwestern Island". Flooding took place and broke up into three main islands and other islands, one became the current island of São Vicente.
  • Up to about 4,000 years ago: Ilhéu dos Passaros separated from the island, the small peninsula shrank up to its current size.

Colonial era

  • 1462 - January 22 - The island was discovered on Saint Vincent's Day
  • 1734 - The island's first fortification built to protect against British, French and Dutch pirates.
  • 1781 - Pirate raids continued to raid, a plan for a new settlement was made.
  • 1795 - The island's first permanent settlement Mindelo, then as Aldeia de Nossa Senhora da Luz was founded
  • 1819
  • 1821 - Population: 295
  • 1838
    • Porto Grande became a coal deposit was established to supply ships on Atlantic routes
    • The city adopted the new name Mindelo after the military expedition in the beaches of Mindelo, Portugal during the Wars of Liberation.
    • Mindelo planned to become capital of Cape Verde replacing Praia, many people wanted the capital to remain in Praia, the capital did not move.
  • 1850 - Population: around 1,400
  • 1852 - Fortim d'El-Rei or Fortim do Mindelo built
  • 1857 - March 10: Slavery abolished on the island, the first in Cape Verde
  • 1850 - Population: 1,400
  • 1861 - A custom house in the port of Mindelo built by governor Januário Correia de Almeida.[1]
  • 1874 - Two submarine or telegraph cables linked with the island, they are now as communication cables or lines, via Madeira, it connected with Brazil in the capital of Pernambuco, Recife.
Porto Grande Bay, the island's north and northwest and its telegraph lines in the 1884 map by Imray
  • 1885 - A telegraph line with Cameroon via Bathurst (now Banjul), Gambia established
  • 1894 - Farol de D. Amélia in the southwest of the island built
  • Early 20th century - Santo Antão Municipality, also as Santo Antão-São Vicente (Northwestern Cape Verde) Municipality split into Santo Antão and São Vicente Municipalities, Santa Luzia, which belonged to São Nicolau Municipality integrated into the municipality of São Vicente
  • 1921 - Liceu Nacional de Infante D. Henrique (now Escola de Jorge Barbosa) opened
  • 1922
    • Eden Park, a picture house, the nation's first cinema opened[2]
    • May 25: CS Mindelense, Cape Verde's first football (soccer) club established
  • 1929 - August 5: FC Derby football (soccer) club established
  • 1930s - Economic crisis started mainly after the Great Depression and famines struck the island
  • 1936 - Claridade, a literary review inaugurated in Mindelo
  • 1937 - Cape Verde's first football (soccer) competition began, the São Vicente Island League began
  • 1940
  • 1950 - Population: 19 576[3]
  • 1960
  • 1962 - Porto Grande expanded
  • 1970 - Population: 31 578[3] (the largest 10-year population addition in percentage numbers: 52.514%)
  • 1974:
    • Rádio Barlavento started radio broadcasting
    • April: the Carnation Revolution took place in Portugal, the Estado Novo regime collapsed, Cape Verde became an autonomous province
    • Mid-year: the final Cape Verdean colonial championships took place

After independence in 1975-1999

  • 1975
    • July 5: Cape Verde declared independence from Portugal and became and independent nation
    • Newspaper Terra Nova founded, the first newspaper mainly served for the island
  • 1980 - Population: 41 594[3]
  • 1981 - May 5: Batuque FC football (soccer) club founded[4]
  • 1984 - Festival de Baía das Gatas, Cape Verde's first major music festival held its first edition
  • 1987 - September 9: Corinthians São Vicente football (soccer) club established
  • 1988 - Newspaper Jornal O Cidadão founded
  • 1990 - Population: 51 277[3]
  • 1992 - Estádio Municipal Adérito Sena sports complex opened
  • 1997 - Second expansion as part of the Porto Grande Modernization Project, the length would be 1,750 m

21st century

See also

References

  1. ^ "Nobreza de Portugal e do Brasil", Direcção de Afonso Eduardo Martins Zúquete, Editorial Enciclopédia, 2.ª Edição, Lisboa, 1989, Volume Terceiro, p. 320
  2. ^ Arenas, Fernando (2011). Lusophone Africa: Beyond Independence. U of Minnesota Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-8166-6983-7.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Source: Statoids
  4. ^ "Batuque FC". Soccerway. Perform Group. Retrieved 21 April 2015.
  5. ^ Source: Instituto Nacional de Estatísticas.
  6. ^ http://www.asemana.publ.cv/spip.php?article63831 Template:Pt icon
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference Instituto_Nacional_de_Estatísticas was invoked but never defined (see the help page).