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The city of Belém, capital of Pará, is full of indentations
and recesses forming islands all around it; there are fifty five
of these islets, most of which are wild and uninhabited, although
some are home to small populations. These include the islands of
Mosqueiro - fringed by fourteen fresh water beaches - and Caratateua
which receive a large number of visitors in summertime. In addition
to these and also near Belém, is the island of Tatuoca which
is the location of the only geodesic station in Latin America,
one of seven in existence in the world.
Situated in the Guajará bay, on the estuary of the Rivers
Tocantins and Pará, the city began as a river port in 1616,
immediately after the French were driven out of São Luiz,
the present day capital of the state of Maranhão. Known
as the "city of the mango trees" because of the large
number of those trees growing there, Belém's historic buildings
reflect cultural traces of the seventeenth century. These buildings
include the City Market for meat and the Iron Market for fish.
Around the markets and forming part of the same complex is the
quayside Ver-o-Peso market, like a picture postcard where colors,
smells and flavors are all mixed together into a scene that is
varied and original. Tied up at the quay are picturesque fishing
boats and canoes that unload a variety of products each day, from
indigenous ceramic articles to herbs and aromatic roots from Amazônia.

In many ways, Belém's colonial architecture
reflects the seventeenth century architecture of Lisbon in Portugal
which served as the inspiration for the main housing projects of the time, with
the frequent use of tile-hung facades. Many of the buildings at
the end of the nineteenth century and early twentieth century also echo French architecture.
Belém is also renowned for its festivals, such as that of
Círio de Nazaré. The town is also famous for its
Emílio Goeldi Museum, an important study and research center on the Amazon forest.
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