Online Encyclopedia

BAHIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 210 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BAHIA  , or SAo

SALVADOR, a maritime city of Brazil and capital of the state of Bahia, situated on the
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Bay of All Saints (Bahia de Todos os
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Santos), and on the western side of the peninsula separating that bay from the
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Atlantic, in 13° S.
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lat. and 38° 30' W. long . Pop . (189o) 174,412; (est . 1900) 200,000 . The commercial section of the city occupies a long, narrow
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beach between the
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water-
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line and bluffs, and contains the
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arsenal,
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exchange, custom-house,
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post-office, railway station, market and
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principal business houses . It has narrow streets badly paved and drained, and made still more dirty and offensive by the
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surface drainage of the upper
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town . Communication with the upper town is effected by means of two elevators, a circular
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tramway, and steep zigzag roads .. The upper town is built on the western slope of a low ridge, the backbone of the peninsula, and rises from the edge of the bluffs to altitudes of 200 to 260 ft. above the sea-level, affording magnificent views of the bay and its islands . There are wider streets, comfortable residences, and attractive gardens in this
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part of the city . Here also are to be found the churches,
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schools, theatres, asylums, and hospitals,
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academies of law and
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medicine, governor's palace, public library, and museum, and an interesting public garden on the edge of the bluff, overlooking the bay . The city is served by four street-car lines, connecting the suburbs with both the upper and
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lower towns . In 1906 contracts were made to reconstruct some of these linesifor electric traction .

The

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railways radiating from the city to inland points are the Bahia & Alagoinhas which is under construction to Joazeiro, on the Sao Francisco
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river, a short line to Santo Amaro, and two lines—the Bahia Central and the Nazareth tramway—extending inland from points on the opposite side of the bay . The
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port of Bahia, which has one of the best and most accessible harbours on the east coast of South
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America, has a large coastwise and
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foreign trade, and is also used as a port of call by most of the steamship lines trading between
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Europe and that continent . Bahia was founded in 1549 by
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Thorne de Souza, the first Portuguese governor-general of Brazil, and was the seat of colonial administration down to 1763 . It was made the seat of a bishopric in 1551, and of an archbishopric in 1676, and until 1905 was the metropolis of the
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Roman Catholic Church in Brazil . The city was captured in 1624 by the Dutch, who held it only a few months . Always conservative in character, the city hesitated in adhering to the declaration of independence in 1822, and also to the declaration of the republic in 1889 . Much of its commercial and
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political importance has been lost, also, through the decay of
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industrial activity in the state, and through the more vigorous competition of the agricultural states of the south . (A . J .

End of Article: BAHIA
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