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QUILIMANE, or KILMANE (the former bei...

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 750 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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QUILIMANE, or KILMANE (the former being the Portuguese spelling)  , a
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town of Portuguese East Africa, in 18° 1' S., 36° 59' E., 14 M. inland from the mouth of the
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river Quilimane or Qua Qua . The river, an
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independent stream during the rest of the
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year, during the rainy season becomes a deltaic branch of the
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Zambezi, with which it is connected by a channel called Mutu . The town (officially Sao Martinho de Quilimane) lies on the north
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bank of the river at a point where it is about a mile broad . There is ample and deep anchorage in the river, but the entrance is obstructed by a bar, over which there is 9 ft. of
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water at low tide, and from 16 to 22 ft. at high tide . Almost all the
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European merchants live in one long,
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acacia-shaded street or boulevard skirting the river, while the
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Indian merchants or Banyans occupy another street
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running at right angles to the first street . Behind lies the native town . The
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total population in 1909 was 2200, including 400 Europeans and 320 Asiatics . The trade of Quilimane, formerly the only
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port for the produce of the Zambezi valley, steadily declined after the establishment of
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Chinde (q.v.) . Efforts made at the beginning of the loth century to develop
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local resources met with little success, owing to high duties and freights . A railway 18 m. long runs to Maquival, a large prazo for the cultivation of tropical produce . The imports are largely cotton goods from England and India, provisions from
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Portugal, and hardware from Germany . The exports are chiefly copra, ground-nuts,
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sugar, sesamum, indiarubber,
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wax, ivory, and beans .

The

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average
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annual value of the trade for the ten years 1897-1906 was:—imports £60,509, exports 34,547• The natives are noted for their skill in the manufacture of jewelry, chiefly gold and
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silver ornaments . The town lies low and is unhealthy, despite efforts to improve its condition . The Quilimane river was entered by Vasco da Gama in 1498, who there discovered an Arab settlement . The
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present town was founded by the Portuguese in the 16th century, and became in the 18th and the early
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part of the 19th centuries one of the
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great slave marts on the east coast of Africa . It was the starting-point of several notable expeditions—that of Francisco Barreto to the country of the
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Monomotapa in 1569, and that of David Livingstone up the Zambezi to Lake
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Nyasa in 1861 being the most famous . Until 1853 the trade of the port was forbidden to any save Portuguese . The European population, until the last quarter of the 19th century, consisted mainly of convicts from Portugal .

End of Article: QUILIMANE, or KILMANE (the former being the Portuguese spelling)
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