<text><span class="style42"></span><span class="style12">PORTUGAL</span><span class="style14"></span><span class="style42">Official name:</span><span class="style13"> A República Portuguesa (The Portuguese Republic)</span><span class="style42">Member of:</span><span class="style13"> UN, EU/EC, NATO, OSCE</span><span class="style42">Area: </span><span class="style13">92389 km2 (35672 sq mi), including Madeira and the Azores</span><span class="style42">Population: </span><span class="style13">10421000 (1993 est)</span><span class="style42">Capital: </span><span class="style13">Lisbon (Lisboa) 2131000 (city 950000; Amadora 100000; Barreiro 55000; 1990 est)</span><span class="style42">Other major cities:</span><span class="style13"> Oporto (Porto) 1695000 (city 450000; Vila Nova de Gaia 65000), Setúbal 80000, Coímbra 75000, Braga 67000 (1990 est)</span><span class="style42">Language: </span><span class="style13">Portuguese (official; 100%)</span><span class="style42">Religion: </span><span class="style13">Roman Catholic (94%)</span><span class="style42">Portuguese overseas territory:</span><span class="style13"> (with area, population and capital) – 18 km2 (7 sq mi), 378000 (1993 est), Macau</span><span class="style42">GOVERNMENT</span><span class="style13">An executive President is elected for a five-year term by universal adult suffrage. The 230-member Assembly is directly elected for four years. The President appoints a Prime Minister who commands a majority in the Assembly. The PM, in turn, appoints a Council of Ministers (Cabinet), responsible to the Assembly. Madeira and the Azores have their own autonomous governments.</span><span class="style42">GEOGRAPHY</span><span class="style13">Behind a coastal plain, Portugal north of the River Tagus is a highland region at the center of which is the mainland’s principal mountain range, the Serra da Estrela, rising to 1993 m (6539 ft). A wide plateau in the northeast is a continuation of the Spanish Meseta. Portugal south of the Tagus is mainly an undulating lowland. The Atlantic islands of Madeira and the Azores are respectively nearly 1000 km (620 mi) and 1200 km (745 mi) southwest of the mainland. At 2315 m (7713 ft), Pico in the Azores is Portugal’s highest peak. </span><span class="style42">Principal river:</span><span class="style13"> Tagus (Rio Tejo) 1007 km (626 mi). </span><span class="style42">Climate: </span><span class="style13">Portugal has a mild and temperate climate which is wetter and more Atlantic in the north, and drier, hotter and more Mediterranean inland and in the south.</span><span class="style42">ECONOMY</span><span class="style13">Agriculture involves 15% of the labor force, but lacks investment following land reforms in the 1970s, since when production has fallen. Major crops include wheat and maize, grapes (for wines such as port and Madeira), tomatoes, potatoes and cork trees. Portugal lacks natural resources. Manufacturing industry includes textiles and clothing (both of which are major exports), footwear, food processing, cork products, and, increasingly, electrical appliances and petrochemicals. Tourism and money sent back by Portuguese working abroad are major foreign-currency earners. Despite impressive recent economic development Portugal remains Western Europe’s poorest country. </span><span class="style42">Currency: </span><span class="style13">Escudo.</span><span class="style42">HISTORY</span><span class="style13">The north of Portugal resisted the Muslim conquests in the Iberian Peninsula in the 8th century. Reconquest of Portuguese territory from the Muslims was slow, but Portugal – a kingdom from 1139 – established its present boundaries in 1270. In the 15th century Portugal became a dynamic trading nation. Prince Henry the Navigator (1394–1460) became a leading patron of Portuguese exploration, which in the 15th century had mapped much of the West African coast. By the middle of the 16th century Portugal had laid the foundations of a vast colonial empire in Brazil, Africa and Asia.On the extinction of the Aviz dynasty in 1580, the thrones of Spain and Portugal were united, until a revolution in 1640 led to the accession of the Portuguese Braganza family. In the 17th and 18th centuries Portuguese power declined, but the country retained major colonies. In 1807 the royal family fled to Brazil to escape a Napoleonic invasion. King John VI did not return from Brazil until 1821, and, in his absence, the Portuguese had established a liberal constitution. Dynastic problems began when John VI’s son Pedro declared Brazil independent (1822), and they continued in a crippling civil war (1832–34) between liberal constitutionalists supporting Queen Maria II (Pedro’s daughter) and absolutists under the rival King Miguel (Pedro’s brother). Instability continued for much of the 19th century. Portugal’s African empire was confirmed, although the country lacked the power to gain more territory in the scramble for Africa.The monarchy was overthrown in 1910, but the Portuguese republic proved unstable and the military took power in 1926. From 1932 to 1968, under the dictatorship of Premier Antonio Salazar (1889–1970), stability was achieved but at great cost. Portugal became a one-party state, and expensive colonial wars dragged on as Portugal attempted to check independence movements in Angola and Mozambique. In 1974 there was a left-wing military coup whose leaders granted independence to the African colonies (1974–75), and initially attempted to impose Marxism on the country. However, elections in 1976 decisively rejected the far left. Civilian rule was restored as Portugal effected a transition from dictatorship to democracy, and simultaneously – through the loss of empire and membership of the EC – became more closely integrated with the rest of Europe.</span></text>