Salvador de Bahia (lit.
"Savior," historic
name: São Salvador da Baía de Todos os Santos, in
English: "Holy Savior of All Saints' Bay") is a city on the northeast coast of Brazil
and the
capital of the Northeastern
Brazilian state of Bahia. Salvador is also known as
Brazil's
capital of happiness due to its easygoing population and
countless popular outdoor parties, including its street carnival.
The first
colonial capital of Brazil
, the city is
one of the oldest in the country and in the New World; for a long time, it was also known as
Bahia, and appears under that name (or as
Salvador da Bahia, Salvador of Bahia so as to
differentiate it from other Brazilian cities of the same name) on
many maps and books from before the mid-20th century.
Salvador
is the third most populous Brazilian city, after São Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro
, and it is the ninth most populous city in Latin America, after Mexico City
, São
Paulo
, Buenos
Aires
, Lima
, Bogotá
, Rio de
Janeiro
, Santiago
and Caracas
.
The city of Salvador is notable in Brazil for its cuisine, music
and architecture, and its
metropolitan
area is the wealthiest in Brazil's Northeast, its poorest
region. Over 80% of the population of metropolitan region of
Salvador has
Black African ancestry
and yet residential
segregation by race
in Salvador is comprable to major U.S. cities like New York and
Chicago. Nonetheless, the African influence in many cultural
aspects of the city makes it the center of Afro-Brazilian culture
and this reflects in turn a curious situation in which
African-associated cultural practices are celebrated, but Black
Bahians face major discrimination.
The historical center of Salvador,
frequently called the Pelourinho, is
renowned for its Portuguese colonial architecture with historical
monuments dating from the 17th through the 19th centuries and has
been declared a World Heritage
Site by UNESCO
in
1985.
Salvador
is located on a small, roughly triangular peninsula that separates
Todos os
Santos Bay
from the open waters of the Atlantic Ocean
. The bay, which gets its name from having
been discovered on
All Saints' Day forms
a natural harbor. Salvador is a major export port, lying at the
heart of the
Recôncavo Baiano, a rich agricultural and
industrial region encompassing the northern portion of coastal
Bahia. The local terrain is diverse ranging
from flat to rolling to hills and low mountains.
A particularly notable feature is the
escarpment that dividesSalvador into the
Cidade Alta ("Upper Town" - rest of the city) and the
Cidade Baixa ("Lower Town" - northwest region of the
city), the former some 85 m (275 ft) above the latter,
with the city's
cathedral and most
administrative buildings standing on the higher ground. An
elevator (the first installed in Brazil), known as
Elevador Lacerda, has connected the two sections since
1873, having since undergone several upgrades.
The
Deputado Luís Eduardo Magalhães
International Airport
connects Salvador with Brazilian cities and also
operates international flights, and the city is home to the
Federal University of
Bahia.
History
Baía de Todos os Santos
(All Saints Bay) was first encountered by the
Portuguese and named in
1502. In 1501, one year after the arrival of
Pedro Álvares Cabral's fleet in
Porto Seguro,
Gaspar de Lemos
arrived at Todos os Santos Bay and sailed most of the Bahia coast.
But the first European man to disembark on "Morro de São Paulo,"
Saint Paul's Mount, was Martim Afonso de Sousa, in 1531, leading an
expedition to explore the coast of the new continent. In 1510, a
ship, containing the Portuguese settler named
Caramuru by the natives, wrecked near the borough
of Rio Vermelho. In 1534, Francisco Pereira Coutinho founded a town
near Barra borough, called
Vila Velha, Portuguese for "Old
Village." In 1549, a fleet of
Portuguese settlers headed by
Tomé de Sousa, the first
Governor-General of Brazil, established
Salvador.
Built on a high cliff overlooking All Saints
bay as the first colonial capital of colonial Brazil
, it quickly became its main sea
port and an important center of the sugar
industry and the slave
trade. Salvador was divided into an upper and a lower
city, the upper one being the administrative and religious area and
where the majority of the population lived. The lower city was the
financial center, with a port and market. In the late 19th Century,
funiculars and an
elevator, the
Elevador Lacerda, were built
to link the two areas.

Abelardo Rodrigues Museum.

Campo Grande Square.
The city became the seat of the first
Catholic bishopric of Brazil in 1552, and is still a center
of Brazilian Catholicism. By 1583, there were 1,600 people residing
in the city, and it quickly grew into one of the largest cities in
the
New World, surpassing any
colonial
American city at the time of the
American Revolution in 1776.
Salvador
was the capital city of the Portuguese viceroyalty of Grão-Pará and its province of Bahia de Todos
os Santos
. The
Dutch
Republic captured and sacked the city in May of 1624, and held
it along with other north east ports until it was re-taken by a
large Spanish-Portuguese fleet, preventing the collapse of
Portuguese resistance to Dutch incursions in Brazil.
Salvador
was the first capital of Brazil and remained so until 1763, when it
was succeeded by Rio de
Janeiro
. The city became a base for the Brazilian
independence movement and was attacked by Portuguese troops in
1812, before being liberated on July 2, 1823. It settled into
graceful decline over the next 150 years, out of the mainstream of
Brazilian
industrialization. It remains,
however, a
national cultural and
tourist center.
By 1948 the city had some 340,000 people, and was already Brazil's
fourth largest city.
In 2008 was 2,948,733, the third largest
population of Brazil
.
In the
1990s, a major city project cleaned up and restored the old
downtown area, the Pelourinho, or Centro
Historico ("Historical Center
").Now, the Pelourinho is a cultural center, and the
very heart of Salvador's tourist trade. Nonetheless, this
social prophylaxis resulted in the forced removal of thousands of
working class residents to the
city's periphery
where they have encountered significant economic hardship.
Additionally, the Historical Center is now something of a
depopulated architectural jewel who's "animation" must be brought
in and sponsored by local shopowners and the
Bahian state.
Similar situations may be found in many
UNESCO
World
Heritage Sites today but the Pelourinho
, in light of Salvador's economic inequalities and
ruling governmental coalition's of the 1990s, seems to have gone
farther than most in sacrificing its population to the needs of tourist-based preservation.
Salvador has been the birthplace of many noted Brazilians,
including musicians such as song-writer
Dorival Caymmi,
Música Popular Brasileira
(MPB or
Brazilian Popular Music) star
Gal Costa, and
Grammy
Award winner
Gilberto Gil. Gil
later went on to serve as a city council member (
vereador)
and is the Brazilian Minister of Culture in the cabinet of
President
Luiz Inácio
Lula da Silva. Also internationally recognized are the city's
Blocos Afros, such as
Olodum,
Ara Ketu, and
Ilê Aiyê. Notable writers
associated with Salvador include
Jorge
Amado, considered one of Brazil's greatest authors and
fabulists, and
João Ubaldo
Ribeiro. The famous Brazilian visual artist
Carybé is based in Salvador as well. Celebrities
born in Salvador include supermodel
Adriana
Lima.
Geography
Climate
Demographics

Bonfim festivities.
According to the
IBGE of 2008, there were
3,475,000 people residing in the Metropolitan Region of Salvador.
The population density was . The last PNAD (National Research for
Sample of Domiciles) census revealed the following numbers:
1,869,550
Pardo (brown) people (53.8%),
990,375
Black people (28.5%), 580,325
White people (16.7%), 31,275
Asian or
Amerindian people (0.9%).
With a
current population estimated in 2,892,625
inhabitants, Salvador is the 3rd most populous city in Brazil
, after
São
Paulo
and Rio de Janeiro
.
Most of
the population is in part descended from Black Africa slaves,
who were mainly Yoruba speakers from
Nigeria
, Ghana
, Togo
and Benin
.
Population growth
- Changing demographics of the city of Salvador
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Religion
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Economy

Fort of Nossa Senhora do Pópulo and
São Marcelo.
Salvador is the second most popular
tourist
destination in Brazil. Tourism and cultural activity are important
generators of
job and income, boosting
the
arts and the preservation of artistic and
cultural heritage. Chief among the points of interest are its
famous
Pelourinho (named after the colonial
pillories that once stood there) district, its
historic churches, and its
beaches. Salvador's
tourism
infrastructure is considered
one of the most modern in Brazil, especially in terms of lodging.
The city offers accommodation to suit all tastes and standards,
from youth hostels to international
hotels.
Construction is one of the most important
activities in the city, and many international (mainly from
Spain
, Portugal
and England
) and national developers are investing in the city
and in the Bahian littoral
zone.
Ford Motor Company has a plant in
the Metropolitan Region of Salvador, in the city of
Camaçari, assembling the
Ford EcoSport and
Ford
Fiesta. It is the only
Automotive industry in
Northern and
Northeastern Brazil.
In December 2001,
Monsanto Company
inaugurated, at the Petrochemical Pole of
Camaçari, in Metropolitan Region of Salvador,
the first plant of the company designed to produce raw materials
for the
herbicide Roundup in
South
America. The investment is equivalent to US$ 500 millions; US$
350 millions were spent in this initial phase.
The Camaçari Plant, the largest unit of Monsanto
outside of the United
States
, is also the only Monsanto plant manufacturing raw
materials for the Roundup production line. The company
started the civil works for the new plant in January 2000.
The area of the unit is 631,000 square meters, including 200,000
square meters of constructed area. Upon completion of the two
phases, it will employ 1,400 people, including direct (350) and
indirect (1050) employments. With this plant in operation,
Monsanto Company now contributes US$ 300
million to the Brazilian economy, avoiding the importation of US$
150 million of raw materials.
The
GDP for the city was R$ 24,072,400,000
(
2006).
The
per capita income for the city
was R$ 8,870 (
2006).
| Economy |
GDP (in reais) |
GDP per capita (in
reais) |
|
| 2003 |
16,929,310,000 |
6,541 |
| 2004 |
19,887,968,000 |
7,557 |
| 2005 |
22,145,303,000 |
8,283 |
| 2006 |
24,072,400,000 |
8,870 |
Tourism and recreation
The
Salvador coastline is one of the longest
for cities in Brazil
.
There are 50 km (31 mi) of
beaches
distributed between the High City and the Low City, from Inema, in
the railroad suburb to the Praia do Flamengo, on the other side of
town.
While the Low City beaches are bordered by
the waters of the All
Saints Bay
(the
country's most extensive bay), the High City beaches, from Farol da Barra to Flamengo, are bordered
by the Atlantic
Ocean
. The exception is
Porto da Barra Beach, the only High
City beach located in the All Saints Bay.
The big
hotels tend to be strung out along the
orla (Atlantic seafront). There are also smaller hotels in Barra
and Porto da Barra, others (generally less expensive) scattered
along the principal thoroughfare of Avenida Sete de Setembro
(shortened to "Avenida Sete" by the locals), and still others
(usually inexpensive) in and around
Pelourinho.
There are also pousadas (
guest
house, or bed and breakfasts) in Barra, Pelourinho, and Santo
Antônio (and other places as well, to be sure), and hostels
(albergues) which are for the most part located in Pelourinho
(though a lot of the "pousadas" in Barra are hostels as
well).
The capital's beaches range from calm inlets, ideal for swimming,
sailing, diving and underwater fishing, as well as open sea inlets
with strong waves, sought by
surfers. There
are also beaches surrounded by
reefs, forming
natural pools of stone, ideal for children.
Interesting places to visit near Salvador include:
- According to the British
newspaper The
Guardian, in 2007, Porto
da Barra Beach was the 3rd best in the world.
- Salvador is the second destine by international tourists
in Brazil, the city of Rio de Janeiro is the first.
- The
large island of Itaparica
in the Bay of All Saints - can be visited either by
a car-ferry, or a smaller foot-passenger ferry which leaves from
near the Mercado Modelo near the Lacerda Elevator.
- BA-099 Highway, or "Line of Coconut" and
"Green Line" of towns and cities, with exquisite beaches, north of
Salvador heading towards Sergipe state.
- Cachoeira
in the recôncavo region - two hours by
bus: a great centre of Candomblé with
a pousada (inn) in the convent
there.
- Morro de São Paulo
in the Valença region across the Bay of All Saints
– a lively island which can be reached by ferry from Salvador (1
hour), by plane, or by bus to Valença and then by 'Rapido' ('fast')
speedboat or smaller ferry. Morro de São Paulo is formed by
five villages of the Tinharé Island.
The city is served by many
shopping
malls: Aeroclube Plaza Show, Caboatã Shopping, Casa Shopping
Cidade, Out Let Center, Salvador Shopping, Shopping Baixo Dos
Sapateiros, Shopping Barra, Shopping Boulevard 161, Shopping Brotas
Center, Shopping Center Iguatemi, Shopping Center Lapa, Shopping Do
Pelô, Shopping Imbuí Plaza, Shopping Itaigara, Shopping Orixás
Center, Shopping Piedade, Shopping Sumaré.

Salvador Shopping.
Salvador has four
parks,
green areas protected, as Jardim
dos Namorados Park, Costa Azul Park, Park of the City, Park of
Pituaçu.
Jardim dos Namorados is located right next to Costa Azul Park and
occupies an area of 15 hectares in
Pituba, where many families used to
spend their vacations in the 1950s. It was inaugurated in 1969,
initially as a leisure area. It underwent a complete renovation in
the 1990s, with the construction of an amphitheater with room for
500 people,
sports courts, playgrounds and
parking four
cars and
tourist buses.
Costa Azul Park occupies an area of approximately 55,000 square
meters, and is located in the neighborhood that goes by the same
name. It has
football courts, gymnastics
equipment, cycleways, jogging tracks, two playgrounds with an area
for
bicycles, sidewalks,
restaurants, green areas, a parking lot with room
for 150
vehicles and an amphitheater capable
of receiving 600 people.
Park of the City is an important preservation area of
Atlantic forest. It was completed renovated
in 2001, becoming a modern social, cultural and leisure place. The
new park has 720 square meter of green area right in the middle of
the city. Among the attractions are Praça das Flores (Flowers
square), with more than five thousand ornamental
plants, especially
flowers.
Besides its environment, the
park has an
infrastructure for
children, with a special schedule of events taking
place every October.
The park has also a
medical station, special
areas for encounters of
students, tourists
and senior citizens, a wide parking area with room for 270
vehicles, a 4,000 meter long jogging track,
surrounding the entire
park and an amphitheater
with capacity for 600 people, where several cultural activities
happen. Leisure and Gymnastics equipment can be found as well and
the security is done by Florestal Police.
Created by state decree in 1973, Pituaçu Park occupies an area of
450 hectares and is one of the few Brazilian ecological parks
located in an
urban area. It is
surrounded by
Atlantic forest, with
a good variety of
plants and
animals. There is also an artificial pond in the
park, built in 1906 along with the Pituaçu Dam, whose purpose was
to supply water to the city. There are a number of possible leisure
activities, ranging from cycloboats rides on the pond, to an
18 km (11 mi) long cycloway circling the entire reserve.
Completing this infrastructure there are several options for
children to play, snack bars,
ice cream parlors and restrooms. A museum is also
located in the park. Espaço Cravo is an outdoor museum with 800
pieces created by Mario Cravo, comprising Totems, winged and
three-dimensional figures, as well as
drawings and
paintings.
Education
Portuguese language is the
official national language, and thus the primary language taught in
schools. But
English and
Spanish are part of the official
high school curriculum. There are also
international schools, such as the
Pan
American School of Bahia.
Educational institutions
The city has several
universities:
Portuguese schools
The city has several
language schools of
Portuguese for foreigners:
Primary and secondary schools
Top high
schools of the city are Pan American
School of Bahia, Anglo-Brasileiro Academy, Federal Institute of
Bahia (IFBA - Cefet), Military College of Salvador, Anchieta
Academy, Oficina Academy, Salesiano Academy, Miró Academy, Marista
School of Salvador, Antônio Vieira Academy, Módulo Academy, Sartre
Academy, São Paulo Academy, Cândido Portinari Academy, Integral
Academy, São José Academy, Alfred Nobel Academy (now owned of the
Sartre Academy), Nossa Senhora da Conceição Academy, Santíssimo
Sacramento Academy, Diplomata Academy, Nossa Senhora do Resgate
Academy, Gregor Mendel Academy and Thales de Azevedo State High
School.
Historic Centre
The
Historic Centre of Salvador was designated in 1985 a World Heritage Site by UNESCO
. The
city represents a fine example the
Portuguese urbanism from the middle of the 16th century with
its higher
administrative town and
its lower
commercial town, and a
large portion of the city has retained the old character of its
streets and colourful houses.
As the
first capital of Portuguese America
, Salvador cultivated slave labor and had its
"pelourinhos" pillories installed in open places like the terreiro
de Jesus and the squares know today as Thomé de Souza and Castro Alves. The "pelourinho" was a
symbol of
authority and
justice, for some, and lashings and injustice for
the majority.
The one erected for a short time in what is
now the Historical Center, and later moved to what is now the Praça
da Piedade (Square of Piety), ended up lending its name to the
historical and architectural complex of Pelourinho, part of the
city's historical center
.
Since
1992, the Pelourinho
neighborhood has been subject to a nearly US$ 100
million "restoration" that has
led to the rebuilding of hundreds of buildings' facades and the
expulsion of the vast majority of the neighborhood's
Afro-descendent population. This process has given rise to
substantial political debate in the State of
Bahia, since the Pelourinho's former residents have
been for the most part excluded from the renovation's economic
benefits (reaped by a few). A major restoration effort resulted in
making the area a highly desirable
tourist
attraction.
Salvador's considerable wealth and status during
colonial times (as
capital of the
colony during 250 years and which gave rise to the
Pelourinho) is reflected in the magnificence of its colonial
palaces,
churches and
convents, most of them dating from the 17th and 18th
centuries. These include:
- Mercado Modelo
(Model Market): In 1861, at the Cayrú Square, the
Customs Building was constructed, with a rotunda (large circular
room with a domed ceiling) at the back end, where ships anchored to
unload their merchandise. In 1971, a market began to operate
in the Customs Building, and thirteen years later, it caught fire,
burned down, and underwent reform. Today, there are 200
stands with a variety of arts and crafts made in Bahia as well as other states in northeastern region
of Brazil
, two
restaurants, and several bar that serve typical drinks and appetizers.
- Elevador Lacerda
(Lacerda Elevator): Inaugurated in 1873, this
elevator was planned and built by the businessman Antônio Francisco
de Lacerda, The four elevator cages connect the between the
Thomé de Souza Square in the
upper city, and the Cayru Square in the lower city. In each
run, which lasts for 22 seconds, the elevator transports 128
persons, 24 hours a day.
Culture
Salvador's historical and cultural aspects were inherited by the
miscigenation of such ethnic groups as Native-Indian, African, and
European. This mixture can be seen in the
religion, golden
cuisine,
cultural manifestations, and custom of Bahia's people.
Literature
As the
capital of colonial
Brazil
until 1763, Salvador was an important cultural
centre since the 16th century, as reflected in the large number of
prominent literary figures associated with colonial Salvador,
usually educated in the religious schools of the convents of the
city and in the University of
Coimbra in Portugal. Frei Vicente do Salvador
(1564-1635), a Bahia-born Franciscan friar who studied in the
Jesuit School of Salvador, was the author of the first book on
Brazilian history written by a Brazil-born author.
Gregório de Mattos, born in
Salvador in 1636, was also educated by the Jesuits. He became the
most important
Baroque poet in
colonial Brazil for his religious and satirical works.
Father António Vieira was born in
Lisbon in 1608, but was raised and educated in the Jesuit school of
Salvador and died in the city in 1697. His erudite
sermons have earned him the title of best writer of
the
Portuguese language in the
Baroque era.
After the
independence of
Brazil (1822), Salvador continued to play an important role in
Brazilian literature. Significant 19th century writers associated
with the city include
Romantic poet
Castro Alves (1847-1871) and diplomat
Ruy Barbosa (1849-1923). In the 20th
century, Bahia-born
Jorge Amado
(1912-2001), although not born in Salvador, helped popularize the
culture of the city around the world in novels such as
Jubiabá,
Dona Flor e Seus Dois
Maridos, and
Tenda dos
Milagres, the settings of which are in Salvador.
Religion
In Salvador, religion is a major contact point between Portuguese
and African influences and, more recently, Brazil's version of a
North American-influenced Pentecostalism. Salvador was the seat of
the first
bishopric in colonial Brazil
(established 1551), and the first bishop,
Pero Fernandes
Sardinha, arrived already in 1552. The
Jesuits, led by the
Manuel da Nóbrega, also arrived in
the 16th century and worked in converting the
Indigenous peoples of the region to Roman
Catholicism.
Many religious orders came to the city, following its foundation:
Franciscans,
Benedictines and
Carmelites. Subsequently to them are created the
Third Orders, the Brotherhoods, and Fraternities, which were
composed mainly of professional and social groups. The most
prominent of these orders were the Terceira do Carmo Order and the
de São Francisco Order, founded by white men, and the Nossa Senhora
do Rosário and São Beneditino Brotherhoods, composed of black men.
In many churches maintained by religious men, were housed the
Santíssimo Sacramento brotherhoods.
Besides these organizations, the expansion of
Catholicism in the city was consolidated through
social care work. Santa Casa the Misericórdia was one oh the
institution that did this kind of work, maintaining
hospitals, shelters for the poor and the elderly,
as well providing assistance to convicts and to those who would
face death penalties. The
convents, on their
part, were cultural and religious formation centers, offering
seminar coursed that often were attende by the lay.
Even with the present evolution, and the growth of
Protestantism and other religions in the city,
the Catholic faith remains as one of its most distinctive features,
drawing a lot of people to its hundreds of churches. Some aspects,
like the use of Portuguese in the Masses, the simplification of the
liturgy, and the adoption of "
pop"
religious songs are
key factors to the triumph of
Catholicism. In the Nossa Senhora do Rosário dos
Pretos Church, Masses are held in the Yorubá language, making use
of African chants and typical clothes, which attract many people
from the black communities.
Most
enslaved Africans in Bahia were brought from Sub-Saharan Africa, especially the
Yoruba-speaking nation
(Iorubá or Nagô in Portuguese) from present-day
Nigeria
. The enslaved were forced to convert to
Roman Catholicism, but their original religion,
Candomblé, has survived in spite of
prohibitions and persecutions. The enslaved Africans managed to
preserve their religion by attributing the names and
characteristics of their Candomblé deities to Catholic saints with
similar qualities.
Hence, as former pagan Christians once associated Pagan deities
with the saints, enslaved Africans in Bahia transformed their
faiths into a syncretic form of religion that still attempts to
please both their own roots and the faith imposed by their masters
and those caught in between both traditions. Thus, up to today,
even nominal Catholics take part in Candomblé rituals in the
terreiros or "centros". Candomblé is based on the cult of
the
Orishas (
Orixás), like
Obatala (
Oxalá), father of humankind;
Ogoun (
Ogum), god of the war and
iron;
Yemanja (
Iemanjá), goddess of
the sea, rivers and lakes.
These religious entities have been syncretised with some Catholic
entities. For instance, Salvador's
Feast of Bonfim,
celebrated in January, is dedicated to both Our Lord of Bonfim
(
Jesus Christ) and Oxalá. Another
important feast is the Feast de Yemanja every February 2, on the
shores of the borough of Rio Vermelho in Salvador, on the day the
church celebrates Our Lady of the Navigators. December 8,
Immaculate Conception Day for Catholics, is also commonly dedicated
to Yemanja' with votive offerings made in the sea throughout the
Brazilian coast.
Religious
syncretism is defined as the
combination of two or more creeds. In Brazil, especially in Bahia,
it came up as a solution for the slaves who were prohibited of
practicing their
religion, so they
pretended to be worshiping catholic saints while in reality they
were venerating their own deities. Hence, associating an orixá
(Candoblé deity) to a catholic was a strategy used by black people
to maintain their beliefs and
rituals alive,
while they fooled their masters, making them believe that their
devotion was to the catholic saints.
The lives of
catholic saints and their own physical features, portrayed on
sculptures and drawings, made the identification with the orixás
easier. Salvador is a
city where different
ethnic and cultural aspects are mixed up, but religious syncretism
remains as one of its most intriguing features. Its ancient
church are a proof of the power of
Catholicism, which was brought by the
Portuguese and forced upon
Blacks and
Indigenous.
Cuisine
The local cuisine, spicy and based on seafood (shrimp, fish),
strongly relies on typically African ingredients and techniques,
and is much appreciated throughout Brazil and internationally. The
most typical ingredient is
azeite-de-dendê, an oil extracted from a palm
tree (
Elaeis guineensis) brought from
West Africa to Brazil during colonial
times.
Using the milky
coconut juice, they prepared a variety of
sea-
food based dishes, such as
Ensopados, Moquecas and Escabeche. The
sugar
cane bagasse was mixed with molasses and Rapadura, in the
creation of coconut desserts like Cocada Branca and Preta. The
remaining of the Portuguese Stew sauce was mixed with
manioc flour to make a mush, which is a traditional
Indian dish. In the markets of Salvador, it is possible to find
stands selling typical dishes of the colonial era. In the Sete
Portas Market, customers eat Mocotó on Friday nights since the
1940s, when the market was inaugurated. In the
restaurants of Mercado Modelo (Model Market),
Sarapatel, stews and several fried dishes are served regularly. In
the São Joaquim, Santa Bárbara and São Miguel markets, there are
stands selling typical food. They are also sold at stands located
on the
beaches, specially crab stews and
oysters. The restaurants that sell typical dishes are located
mostly along the
coast and in Pelourinho. They
prepare a wide variety of recipes that take
palm tree oil.
Traditional dishes include
caruru,
vatapá,
acarajé,
bobó-de-camarão,
moqueca baiana, and
abará.
Some of these dishes, like the acarajé and abará, are also used as
offerings in
Candomblé rituals. An
acarajé is basically a deep-fried "
bread" made
from mashed beans from which the skins have been removed (reputedly
feijão fradinho "black-eyed peas" but in reality almost always the
less expensive brown beans so ubiquitous in
Bahia). But Salvador is not only typical
food. Other recipes created by the slaves were the
Haussá Rice (rice and jerked
beef mowed
together), the Munguzá, used as offering to the Candomblé deity
Oxalá (who is the father of all deities, according to the religion)
pleased the matrons very much. So did the Bolinhos the Fubá, the
Cuscuz (cornmeal) and the Mingau (porridge). According to Arany
Santana, the Ipetê (used in the
rituals to
the deity Oxum) became the Shrimp Bobó (a kind of mush), and the
Akará (honoring the deities Xangô and Iansã) became the
world-famous Acarajé. Who comes here also has a large number of
restaurants specialized on
international
cuisine.
There also places that serve dishes from
other states of Brazil
, especially
from Minas
Gerais
and the Northeast
region.
Capoeira
Capoeira is a unique mix of
dance and
martial art of
Afro-Brazilian origin, combining agile dance moves with unarmed
combat techniques.
Capoeira in Portuguese
literally means "chicken coop". The presence of capoeira in Brazil
is directly connected to the importation of African slaves by the
Portuguese, and Salvador is considered the centre of origin of the
modern capoeira branches. The initial purpose of Capoeira's
emergence was to boost the slaves
morale,
remind them of their homeland through
music
and to defend themselves against
aggression from their owners. The art of Capoeira
is uniquely identified by
swinging hips,
arm stands,
head butts and sweeping feet movements. The art
required a good level of agility and core strength. In the first
half of the 20th century, Salvador-born masters
Mestre Bimba and
Mestre Pastinha founded capoeira schools and
helped standartise and popularise the art in Brazil and the world.
The practice of Capoeira was
banned in 1892,
though in 1937 it was made
legal.
Capoeira practices are accompanied by special music and songs.
Musical instruments used in
capoeira music include the
berimbau,
atabaque,
pandeiro,
agogô, and
caxixi.
Capoeira
has moved from the senzalas and quilombos of Brazil
to New York
, Berlin
, Australia, and just about every place in
between.
Museums

Salvador Historical Centre.

Historical and Geographical Institute
of Bahia.
The artistic, cultural and social heritage of Salvador is preserved
in museums. From Museu de Arte da Bahia (MAB), which is the oldest
in the State, to Museu Náutico, the newest, the first capital of
Brazil preserve unique pieces of history. Every museum in the sate
is an unusual journey. The collection have such an immense
symbolical value that no financial figure could ever measure.
Even so,
the importance of Salvador's museums has
drawn the interest of experts from Brazil
and
abroad. There we can find valuable pieces of religious art,
ornamental items from the old manors and also objects that belonged
to the old families and public figures of the state. The Arte Sacra
and Abelardo Rodrigues museums are must, see programs. They both
have the biggest sacra art collection in the country. Another
obligatory tour is to Museu de Arte da Bahia.
Museu de Arte da Bahia has paintings, Chinese porcelain, furniture
and sacra images from the 17th and 18th centuries. Museu Costa
Pinto has private, owned items such as, pieces of art, crystal
objects, furniture from the 18th and 19th centuries, tapestry,
sacra pieces and Chinese porcelain. The golden jewelry and the 27
ornamental
silver buckles are the most
precious in the entire collection.
Another important
museum is Museu da Cidade,
where many items that help to preserve the heritage of old Salvador
are kept. There we can find thematic objects that belonged to
public personalities in the state like dolls, orixá statues and
religious images. There is also an art gallery located inside of
the museums. There is also Fundação Casa de Jorge Amado, with
pictures, objects and the life's stories of the author of memorable
novels that portray old Bahia like, Gabriela – Cravo e Canela, Dona
Flor e Seus Dois Maridos, O País do Carnaval and Tieta do
Agreste.
Some
church and
monasteries also have museums located in their
premises. Examples of this are the Carmo da Misericórdia and São
Bento Museums. After the renovation of the Forts, were created
Museu Náutico, in Forte de Santo Antonio da Barra (Farol da Barra)
and Museu da Comunicação, in Forte São Diogo. Other important
museums that are scattered through Salvador are: Museu do Cacau,
Museu geológico do Estado, Museu tempostal, Solar do Ferrão, Museu
de Arte Antiga e Popular Henriqueta M Catharino, Museu Eugênio
Teixeira Leal and Museu das Portas do Carmo.
Carnival/Carnaval

Salvador's Carnival is the biggest in
the world.
According to the
Guinness Book
of Records, the
carnival or
Carnaval of Salvador de Bahia is the biggest street party
on the planet. For an entire week, almost 2 million people
celebrate throughout 25 kilometers (15 miles) of streets, avenues
and squares. The direct organization of the party involves the
participation of 100 thousand people. Its dimensions are gigantic.
Salvador
receives an average of 800 thousand visitors from municipalities
located as far as 150 kilometers (93 miles) away, from several
States of Brazil and from a number
of other countries (Europe, U.S.A.
, Israel
, Argentina
, Australia, and many
others).
The cover was done by 2,446 professionals in local press, national,
and
international. The carnival was
broadcast to 135
countries through 65
radio stations, 75
magazines, 139 producers of
video, 97
newspapers (21
international), 14
tv stations, and 168
websites.
Rei Momo: The
King of
Carnival, Momo, is handed the keys to the city in
the
morning, on the Thursday before Fat
Tuesday, and the party officially begins. Camarotes: These
grandstands line the street in the neighborhood of Campo Grande.
Watch the show from here without being trampled by the crowd. Trios
Eléctricos: Outfitted with deafening sound systems, these
60-foot-long trucks carry a kick line of gyrating, scantily clad
dancers along with the city's best-loved performers, among them
Ivete Sangalo,
Daniela Mercury,
Cláudia Leitte,
Chiclete com Banana,
Carlinhos Brown, and others.
The music played during Carnaval includes
Axé and
Samba-reggae.
Many "blocos" participate in Carnaval, the "blocos afros" like Malé
Debalé, Olodum and Filhos de Gandhi being the most famous of them.
Carnival is heavily policed. Stands with five or six seated
police officers are erected everywhere and
the
streets are constantly patrolled by
police groups moving in single file.
The Osmar
Circuit: goes from Campo Grande to Castro
Alves square, The Downtown Circuit, in Downtown and Pelourinho
, and The Dodô Circuit; goes from Farol da Barra to Ondina, along the coast. The Osmar circuit is the oldest circuit.
It is also where the event's most traditional groups parades. In
Dodô, where the artist box seats are located, the party becomes
lively toward the end of the
afternoon and
it continues until
morning.
The three Carnival Circuits are:
- The Campo Grande -
Praça Castro Alves Circuit, also called the "Osmar" Circuit, or
simply the "Avenidas" ("Avenues");
- The Barra - Ondina Circuit, also called the "Dodô"
Circuit;
- The
Pelourinho
Circuit, also called the "Batatinha" ("Little
potato") Circuit.
Summer Festival
The Salvador Summer Festival, is an annual five-day music
extravaganza that this year is to feature its usual who's who of
Brazilian
popular music: Daniela
Mercury, Eva, Capital Inicial, Titãs, Skank, Jota Quest, Ivete
Sangalo, Chiclete com Banana, Ana Carolina, and others. The price
of admission has yet to be set. Attractions international as
Gloria Gaynor,
Men at Work,
Eagle-Eye Cherry,
Fatboy Slim,
Ben
Harper,
Manu Chao,
West Life,
The Gladiators and
Alanis Morissette already sang in Summer
Festival.
Funk and Bahia Funk Dances
Funk has become a musical genre in Brazil that exemplifies how many
influences, in and out of Brazil, merged with Brazilian culture in
the 20th century to form a new hybrid sound.
Funk originated as a black American form of music that
started in the 1960s and included artists like
James Brown and
The
Funk Brothers.

Amphitheater of City Park of
Salvador.
Although
funk was embraced by many parts of Brazil
, its sound
would eventually become localized so the music would differ from
city to city. This difference can be viewed with the funk
scenes in Rio de Janeiro and Salvador. The music and the
environment are all representative of the city where one listens to
funk music.
For
instance, the music played in Salvador at a
Black Bahia Funk Ball is more American
than its counterpart in Rio de Janeiro
. Music material from Rio, which sells
reasonably well around Rio, is poorly known in Salvador and, in any
case, held to be inferior and "less modern" than funk sung in
English. Another difference can be
seen with the funk dancehalls. The Ball incorporates the entire
setting, which entails the attire, the slang, the specific way of
dancing break, the decoration, the organization of permanent dance
groups. These dancehalls are a place for everyone to come together
to have fun before the start of another work week. Even the dance
rivalries are not true rivalries in the sense that the dance groups
do not physically fight one another. The group members do all their
battling on the dance floor, using their dance moves as their
weapons to demonstrate their dance skill and superiority.
Theatre
Salvador is home to a vibrant
theater scene.
Among the many theaters are: Castro Alves Theatre (TCA),Sala do
Côro (mini Theatre in Castro Alves Theatre),IRDEB Theatre (TV
Educativa),SENAC Theatre (Pelourinho),ICÉIA Theatre,Museu Eugênio
Teixeira Leal Theatre (Pelourinho),Barra Theatre,Espaço Xisto
Theatre,Maria Betânia Theatre,Jorge Amado Theatre,Diplomata
Theatre,Sesi Rio Vermelho Theatre,Vila Velha Theatre,XVIII
Theatre,ISBA Theatre,Santo Antônio Theatre,ACBEU Theatre,Anchieta
Theatre,Nazaré Theatre,ICBA Theatre,Gamboa Theatre,Gregório de
Mattos Theatre,Módulo Theatre,Miguel Santana Theatre,Cultural
Theatre,Cine Casa do Comércio Theatre,Dias Gomes Theatre (Sindicato
dos Comerciários),Plataforma Theatre.
Libraries
The first
books that arrived in Salvador, were
brought by the
Jesuits, who came with Tomé
de Souza. The first
libraries or
bookstores that appeared were under the control of
the religious missionaries and were mostly composed of books on
religion. Areas combining
leisure and
culture,
Salvador's libraries are an entertainment option for tourists and
researchers. Some of these spaces have religious origins, some of
them are
temples of
knowledge accessible only to a few, due to the
fragility of the relics they contain.
The
Benedictine,
Carmelites,
Franciscans and
Capuchin orders have in
Salvador, titles related to fundamental aspects of the state's
history, being important for a comprehensive view of the political,
religious, moral and artistic formation of the city. Conversely to
the restrictive religious libraries, the public libraries and the
ones linked to institutions that give incentive to
culture and
information,
provide the general public with a variety of
titles. Salvador's
libraries
are: Arquivo Histórico Municipal, Biblioteca Acbeu, Biblioteca
Aloísio da França Rocha, Biblioteca Anísio Teixeira, Biblioteca da
Fundação João Fernandes da Cunha, Biblioteca do Centro Cultural
Prof. Ademar Cardoso, Biblioteca do Museu de Arte da Bahia,
Biblioteca do Serviço Social do Comércio, Biblioteca Juracy
Magalhães Júnior, Biblioteca Ministro Coqueijo Costa, Biblioteca
Monteiro Lobato, Biblioteca Mosteiro de São Bento da Bahia,
Biblioteca Pública do Estado da Bahia, Centro de Documentação
Cultural sobre a Bahia, Gabinete Português de Leitura.
Handcraft
The handcraft legacy of Bahia, which was strongly influenced by the
three people responsible for the construction of its cultural and
ethnic identity. Using only raw materials (
straw,
leather,
clay,
wood,
seashells and
beads), the most
rudimentary crafts are reasonably unexpensive. Other pieces are
created with the use of metals like
gold,
silver,
copper and
brass. The most sophisticated ones are
ornamented with precious and semi-precious gems. The craftsmen and
women generally choose religion as the main theme of their work.
They portray the images of Catholic saints and Candomble deities on
their pieces. The good luck charms such as the clenched fist, the
four leaf clover, the garlic and the famous Bonfim ribbons, express
the city's religious syncretism. Nature is also portrayed on these
pieces, reflecting the local
wildlife.
Music appears in the atabaque drums, the rain
sticks, the water drums and the famous berimbau, along with other
typical instruments.
Salvador holds an international reputation of a city where musical
instruments that produce unique sounds are made. These instruments
are frequently used by world famous artists in their recording
sessions. A place to see Salvador's handcrafts production is
Mercado Modelo, which is the biggest handcraft center in
Latin America. Pieces can also be purchased at
Instituto de Artesanato de Mauá and at Instituto do Patrimônio
Artístico e Cultural (IPAC). These are organizations that promote
typical
art in
Bahia. In
Pelourinho there are a variety of stores selling souvenirs to
visitors.
Human rights and LGBT rights
Salvador is also home to the oldest, continuous
gay rights and
human
rights organization in Brazil, the
Grupo Gay da Bahia (GGB). Established by
Dr.
Luiz Mott in 1980 and currently headed
by
Marcelo Cerqueira, GGB has
played a central role in the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender
equality movement both in Bahia and across Brazil, and has helped
to educate the local population on
HIV and AIDS
prevention and human rights abuses. Today, the city has one of the
lowest percentage of HIV, between the capitals, in Brazil.
The
Gruppo Gay da Bahia has been active and organizes weekly gatherings
in the old quarter Pelourinho (Historic
Centre of Salvador
).
Salvador's gay
pride parade is now one of the largest in Brazil
,
approximately 400,000 people in 2008. The
Public Defender of the State of
Bahia, located in many cities of the state, including
Salvador, fights the discrimination on account of the race, color,
sexual orientation, and religious
orientation, for exemple.
The city offers many options: gay
night
clubs (
San Sebastian
Salvador,
Off Club, and many others);
gay
saunas (Sauna Paradise, Esgrima, Sauna
Rio's, Sauna Campos, Sauna Olympus, Sauna Phoenix and Thermas
Persona); gay
bars (Beco da Off, Beco dos
Artistas, Babalotin, and many others); gay
beaches (
Porto da
Barra Beach -
right part and Artistas Beach). The LGBT event
Hell & Heaven, in Costa do Sauípe, is
one of the largest LGBT events in Brazil.
Transportation
International Airport
Deputado Luís Eduardo Magalhães
International Airport
is located in an area of more than 6 million square
meters between sand dunes and native
vegetation. The airport lies 20 km (12 mi)
north of Downtown Salvador and the road to the airport has already
become one of the city's main scenic attractions. In 2007, the
airport handled 5,920,573 passengers and 91,043 aircraft movements,
placing it
5th
busiest airport in Brazil in terms of passengers. The airport's
use has been growing at an average of 14% a year and now is
responsible for more than 30% of passenger movement in
Northeastern Brazil. Nearly 35 thousand
people circulate daily through the passenger terminal. The airport
generates more than 16 thousand direct and indirect jobs, to serve
a daily average of over 10 thousand passengers, 250 takeoffs and
landings of 100 domestic and 16 international flights.
Buses between the city centre and the airport are fairly
frequent and cheaper than taxis. Buses also go to Rodoviária
(
Bus Terminal), which is the city's
main bus station and located 5 km (3 mi) from the city
centre.
There are good
cafes and
fast food restaurants at the airport. A
bar offers alcoholic or soft drinks.
There are several
shops in the terminal
building selling a variety of items, including fashion clothing,
jewellery,
gift items
and
books and
magazines. There is also a
pharmacy in the terminal building. Buses between
the city centre and the airport are fairly frequent. Take the Praça
da Sé (Sé Square)/Aeroporto
bus. It is much
cheaper than going by
taxi.
Buses also go to Rodoviária (
Bus
Terminal), which is the city's main bus station and located
5 km (3 mi) from the city centre. The
car park of the airport, is located near the
terminal building and has parking spaces for 600
cars.
In addition to domestic and regional
services, the airport has non-stop flights to Miami
, United States
, Madrid
, Spain
, Frankfurt
, Germany
, Lisbon
, Portugal
, London
, United
Kingdom
, Montevideo
, Uruguay
, Santiago
, Chile
, Buenos Aires
, Argentina
, and Asunción
, Paraguay
. Its
IATA
airport code is SSA and the first in Northeastern Brazil.
Port
With
cargo volume that grows year after year following the same economic
development rhythm implemented in the State, the Port of
Salvador
, located in the Bahia de Todos os Santos
, holds status as the port with the highest movement
of containers of the North/Northeast and the second-leading
fruit exporter in Brazil
. The
port's facilities operate from 8am to noon and from 1h30am to
5h30pm.
The ability to handle high shipping volume has positioned the port
of Salvador for new investments in technological modernization, and
the port is noted for implementing a high level of operational
flexibility and competitive rates. The goal of port officials is to
offer the necessary
infrastructure
for the movement of goods, while simultaneously meeting the needs
of international importers and exporters.
Metro
Salvador
Metro System is under
construction, and its 1st phase will be ready in March 2008,
between Lapa and Acceso Norte
Stations, and
in 2009 will be ready the stations between Acceso Norte and Pirajá.
In 2009 it will have 12.5 km (7.7 mi) and 8 stations and
will have link with the
bus system. The citizen could take a bus to the
metro station and there take the train without
paying again. A contract for the supply and installation of systems
and rolling stock for the first metro line in Salvador, was signed
on July 24 with Metro Salvador.
Salvador
Metro also has a 25-year operating and maintenance
concession, renewable for a further 25 years. The
metro will be Brazil's eighth.
The main
shareholders in Metro Salvador are the Spanish
companies Construcciones y
Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles, Dimetronic, and ICF. It is expected that Metro Salvador will
invest $150 million dollars in rolling stock and signalling and
telecommunications equipment. The contract covers the first
11.9 km (7.3 mi) line from Pirajá to Lapa, which is due
to open in 2003. The project is also financed by a $150 million
dollars
World Bank loan and contributions
from the federal, Bahia state, and Salvador city
governments.
Highways
The
BR-101 and BR-116 federal
highways cross
Bahia from north
to south, connecting Salvador to the rest of the country.
At the
Feira de
Santana
junction, take the BR-324 state highway. The
capital of Bahia is served by several coach companies from almost
every Brazilian state. BR-242, starting at São Roque do Paraguaçu
(transversal direction), is linked to BR-116, bound to the
middle–west region. Among the state highways stands BA-099, which
makes connection to the north coast and BA-001, which makes
connection to the south of
Bahia.
Buses provide direct service to most major Brazilian
cities, including Rio de
Janeiro
, São
Paulo
, and Brasília
, as well as regional destinations. In 2007,
the city had 586,951
vehicles, the largest
number of the
Northern and
Northeastern Brazil.
Four paved
highways connect the city to the
national highway system. Running north from the Farol (
lighthouse) de Itapoã are hundreds of miles of
wonderful
beaches. These beaches are
accessible via the
BA-099 Highway or (Line of
Coconut and Green Line), a (toll)
road, kept in
excellent condition, running parallel to the
coast, with access roads leading off to the coast
itself. The
road runs along
dunes of snow-white sand, and the coast itself is an
almost unbroken line of
coconut palms.
The communities along this coast range from
fishing villages to
Praia do Forte.
Distances
Neighborhoods
Although the creation of Salvador was masterminded by the
Kingdom of Portugal and its project
conducted by the
Portuguese
engineer Luís Dias (who was responsible for
the city's original design), the continuous growth of the capital
through the decades was completely spontaneous. The walls of the
city-fortress could not hold the expansion of the city, towards the
Carmo and the area where now stands
Castro
Alves Square. At the time of its foundation, Salvador had only
two squares and the first neighborhood ever built here was the
Historic City Center.
Pelourinho
and Carmo came subsequently, created as a
consequence of the growing need of space that the religious orders had. With the
rapid expansion, the
neighborhoods grew
and many of them were clustered in the same area, so today there
aren't accurate records as to their exact number. For
urban management purposes, the city is currently
divided on 17 political-administrative zones. However, due to their
very
cultural relevance and to
postal conveniences, the importance of the neighborhoods of
Salvador remains intact. They represent the city's lively
atmosphere and its
cosmopolitan
character.

Armação Neighborhood.
Salvador
is divided into a number of distinct neighborhoods, with the most
well known districts being Pelourinho, the Historic
Centre
, Comércio, and Downtown, all located in West
Zone. Barra, with its
Farol da Barra,
beaches and which is where one
of the Carnival circuits begins, Barra is home of the Portuguese
Hospital and Spanish Hospital, the neighborhood is located in South
Zone.
Vitória, a
neighborhood with many high rise buildings, is located in South
Zone.
Campo Grande, with
its Dois de Julho Square and the monument to Bahia's independence,
is also located in South Zone, as is
Graça, an important residential
area.

View of Upper Town Neighborhood and
Lower Town Neighborhood.
Ondina, with Salvador's
Zoobotanical Garden and the site where the
Barra-Ondina Carnival circuit ends, the neighborhood is home of the
Spanish Club, is also a neighborhood in the South Zone.
Itaigara,
Pituba, Horto Florestal,
Caminho das Árvores,
Loteamento Aquárius,
Brotas,
Stiep, Costa Azul, Armação, Jaguaribe and Stella Maris are the
wealthiest neighborhoods in the East Zone and the city.
Rio Vermelho, a neighborhood
with a rich architectural history and numerous restaurants and
bars, is located in the South Zone.
Itapoã, known throughout Brazil
as the home of
Vinicius de Moraes
and for being the setting of the song "Tarde em Itapoã", is located
in East Zone.The Northwest area of the city in along the Bay of All
Saints, also known as
Cidade Baixa ("Lower city"),
contains the impoverished suburban neighborhoods of
Periperi, Paripe, Lobato, Liberdade, Nova
Esperança, and Calçada.
The neighborhood of Liberdade (Liberty) has the
largest proportion of Afro-Brazilians
of Salvador and Brazil
.
Sports
Salvador provides visitors and residents with various sport
activities. The Fonte Nova Stadium, also known as Estádio Octávio
Mangabeira is a
football stadium
inaugurated on January 28, 1951 in Salvador,
Bahia, with a maximum capacity of 66,080 people. The
stadium is owned by the Bahia government, and is the home ground of
Esporte Clube Bahia. Its formal
name honors Octávio Cavalcanti Mangabeira, a civil engineer,
journalist, and former Bahia state governor from 1947 to 1954. The
stadium is nicknamed Fonte Nova, because it is located at Ladeira
das Fontes das Pedras.
Esporte Clube
Bahia and
Esporte Clube
Vitória are Salvador's main football teams. Esporte Clube Bahia
has won 2 national titles, Brazil's Cup in 1959 and the Brazilian
League in 1988, while Esporte Clube Vitória was a runner up in the
Brazilian league in 1993.
Salvador has two large green areas for the practice of
golf. Cajazeiras Golf and Country Club has a 18-hole
course, instructors, caddies and equipment for rent. Itapuã Golf
club, located in the area of the Sofitel Hotel, has a 9-hole
course, equipment store, caddies and clubs for rent.
Tennis is very popular among Salvador's elites, with
a great number of players and tournaments in the city's private
clubs. Brasil Open, the country’s most important tournament happens
every year in
Bahia.
During the last decades,
volleyball has
grown steadily in Salvador, especially after the gold medal won by
Brazil in the
1992 Summer
Olympics in Barcelona. The most important tournaments in
Bahia are the State Championship, the State
League tournament and the Primavera Games, and the main teams are
Associação Atlética da Bahia, Bahiano de Tênis, and Clube the
Regatas Itapagipe. There are also
beach
volleyball events. Salvador has housed many international
tournaments. Federação Bahina de Voleibol (the state league) can
inform the schedule of tournaments.
Bowling
is practiced both by
teenagers and
adults in Salvador. Boliche do Aeroclube and Space
Bowling are equipped with automatic lanes as well as a complete bar
infrastructure.
Bahia's
basketball
league exists since 1993 and has 57
teams. The
sport is very popular in the city of Salvador, especially among
students. There are several courts scattered
across the city, where is possible to play for free, like the one
located at Bahia Sol square, where people with spinal cord lesions
play. There are also several
gymnasiums, in
clubs like Bahiano de Tênis and Associação
Atlética and the Antonio Balbino Gymnasiums (popularly known as
"Balbininho"), which is an arena that can hold up to 7,000
people.
Todos os Santos Bay and Salvador's climatic conditions are ideal
for competition and recreational
sailing.
The city is equipped with good
infrastructure for practice of sailing, such
as
rental and sale of dock space, boat
maintenance,
restaurants, snack bar,
convenience stores, nautical products stores, boat rental agencies,
VHF and SSB communication systems, events, and total assistance to
crews. The large number of sailing events organized by
clubs and
syndicates, like
oceanic races and typical boats (wooden fishing
boats and
canoes) races,
demonstrates the sport's growing force. Currently, Salvador has a
national racing schedule with dozens of events, also receiving the
Mini Transat 6.50 and Les Illes du
Soleil races.
Rowing boat races started in the city
more than a hundred years ago. It was originally practiced by young
men from traditional families, who spent their
summer vacations there. The
sport is a leisure option in Cidade Baixa (the lower
part of the city).
Esporte
Clube Vitória and Clube São Salvador were the pioneers in the
sport. Nowadays, these two entities and also Clube de Regatas
Itapagipe lead the competitions that take place in the city. With
the recent renovation of the Dique do Tororó area, Salvador
received new lanes for the practice of the
sport.
Human development
The human development of Salvador varies greatly by locality,
reflecting the spatial segregation and vast socioeconomic
inequalities in the city. In 2000, there are neighborhoods with
very high
human development
index equal to or greater than the indexes of some
Scandinavian countries, but also those in the
lower range in line with, for example,
North
Africa.
Neighborhoods and localities champions:
- Itaigara (0.971) -
(Greater than , - 0.968)
- Caminho das
Árvores - Iguatemi (0.968) - (Equal to , - 0.968)
- Caminho das
Árvores/Pituba -
Loteamento Aquárius (0.968) - (Equal to , - 0.968)
- Brotas or Santiago de
Compostela (0.968) - (Equal to , - 0.968)
- Pituba - Paulo VI Avenue,
Nossa Senhora da Luz Park (0.965) - (Greater than -
0.962)
Neighborhoods and localities in last place:
- Rural Zone/Areia Branca, CIA Airport-Ceasa (0.652) -
(Greater than - 0.650)
- Coutos/Fazenda Coutos, Felicidade (0.659) - (less than
(0.670) and - 0.673)
- Paz Neighborhood/Itapuã - Exposições Park (0.664) - (less
than (0.670) and - 0.673)
Notable residents
- Acelino Freitas, boxer.
- Adriana Lima, Supermodel.
- Antônio Carlos
Magalhães, politician.
- Antônio Carlos
Vovô, leader of Ilê Aiyê Afro Bloco.
- Bebeto Gama, football forward.
- Caetano Veloso, singer.
- Carlinhos Brown, singer.
- Castro Alves, poet.
- Cláudia Leitte, singer.
- Daniela Mercury, musician.
- Dias Gomes, playwright.
- Dorival Caymmi, singer.
- Gal Costa, singer.
- Gilberto Gil, singer.
- Gregório de Mattos,
poet.
- Irmã Dulce, Catholic nun.
- Itamar Franco, politician.
- Ivete Sangalo, singer.
- Jorge Amado, writer.
- Lázaro Ramos, actor.
- Lyoto Machida, mixed martial
artist.
- Manuel dos Reis Machado,
capoeira master.
- Margareth Menezes,
singer.
- Maria Bethânia, singer.
- Pitty, musician.
- Raul Seixas, musician.
- Ricardo Santos, beach volleyball
player.
- Ruy Barbosa de Oliveira, writer,
jurist and politician.
- Saulo Fernandes, singer.
- Simone
Bittencourt, singer.
- Tony Kanaan, race car driver.
- Wagner Moura, actor.
- Vicente Ferreira
Pastinha, capoeira master
Sister cities
Salvador's
sister cities are:
See also
References
- Population of Salvador
- Introduction to Bahia - New York Times
- Barsa Planeta Ltda
- Religion in Salvador by IBGE
- Historic Churches in Pelourinho
- Folha Online - Growth in construction has attracted many
international investors
- Top 10 beaches of the world | Travel |
guardian.co.uk
- Top High schools of Salvador
- New Pelourinho
- Portuguese language in the Baroque era
- Capoeira Information
- Carnaval of Salvador
- Numbers of Carnival - Salvador
- Carnival of Salvador in The New York Times
- Osmundo Pinho. "Ethnographies of the Brau: body, masculinity
and race in the reafricanization in Salvador." In Estudos
Feministas. 2006. University of Campinas
- Tomé de Souza in Salvador
- Model Market of Salvador
- Salvador has one of the lowest percentage of HIV in
Brazil
- Gay pride of Salvador
- Pubic Defender of the State of Bahia
- Gay life in Salvador
- Gay Beaches in the city
- Hell &
Heaven - Bahia
- Airport statistics for 2007 (Infraero) - Deputado
Luís Eduardo Magalhães International Airport
- Salvador Metro
- Salvador City Hall - Number of Vehicles
- Liberdade Neighborhood
- Basketball in Salvador
- Brazilian Federation of Basketball
- Rowing boat in Salvador
- Miami and Salvador are Sister Cities - Miami City
Hall - International Relations
External links
Official
Education