Faro, Faro District, Algarve, Portugal, Europe
Faro is the southernmost city in
Continental Portugal. It is located in the
Faro Municipality in southern
Portugal. The city proper has 41,934 inhabitants and the entire municipality has 64.560 (
2011). It is the seat of the
Faro District and capital of the
Algarve region.
The Algarve and
Faro district cover the same territory. The
Ria Formosa lagoon attracted human occupants from the Palaeolithic age until the end of pre-history. During that time a settlement grew up
Ossonoba which was an important town during the period of
Roman occupation and, according to historians, the forerunner of present-day Faro. From the
3rd century onwards and during the
Visigothic period it was the site of an
Episcopal see. With the advent of
Moorish rule in the
8th century Ossonoba retained its status as the most important town in the southwest corner of the
Iberian Peninsula. In the 9th century it became the capital of a short-lived princedom and was fortified with a ring of defensive walls. At this time the name
Santa Maria began to be used instead of Ossonoba.
Later on the town was known as Harun (from a local Muslim chieftain), hence its current name, Faro. During the
500 years of Moorish rule there were some
Jewish inhabitants in Faro who wrote copies of the
Old Testament. One of Faro's historical names in
Arabic is أخشونبة.
The Moors were defeated by the forces of the
Portuguese King Afonso III in 1249. With the decline of the importance of the city of Silves, Faro took over the role of administration of the
Algarve area.
The Earl of Essex sacked the town in 1596 and seized the library of the
Bishop of Faro. These books appeared later in the
University of Oxford as part of the
Bodleian Library. One of the books sacked was the first ever printed book in Portugal - a Torah in local
Hebrew / Judeo Español - printed by
Samuel Gacon at his workshop in Faro.
Lagos had become the capital of the historical province of Algarve in 1577 and remained so until 1756, the year following the destruction of much of the town by the
1755 Lisbon earthquake. The earthquake damaged several areas in the Algarve, where a tsunami dismantled some coastal fortresses and, in the lower levels, razed houses.
Almost all the coastal towns and villages of the Algarve were heavily damaged, except Faro, which was protected by the sandy banks of Ria Formosa lagoon. Since then Faro has been the administrative seat of the region. Faro is located next to the Ria Formosa lagoon, a nature reserve of over 170 square kilometers and a stopping place for hundreds of different species of birds during the spring and autumn migratory periods.
The beach is roughly seven kilometers from the city, and consists of a long sandy spit reached through a bridge. The city has a public university (the
University of the Algarve), an international airport (
Faro airport), a seaport, a marina, a railway station and complete inter-regional bus services. Its 30,000-seater stadium
Estádio Algarve, shared by the neighboring cities of Faro and
Loulé, was one of the venues of the
Euro 2004. It currently stands vacant, but locals hope that a football team will finally give use to the stadium.
Louletano Desportos Clube (a club from the city of Loulé) and
Sporting Clube Farense (from Faro), are not enough to use such a big stadium; instead they use smaller municipal stadiums. The stadium is also used to host concerts, festivals and other events.
Faro airport is not too far away from the city itself. In recent years the numbers of visitors traveling through the airport has increased as more and more low-cost airlines compete to offer cheap flights to the Algarve. The transport facilities to and from Faro airport with the centre of Faro include taxicabs and a bus line. Faro has a moderate
Mediterranean climate (
Köppen climate classification: Csa).
Summers are warm to hot and sunny with average daytime temperatures of 27-35 °C (81-95 °F).
The weather in the autumn and winter months is generally mild with temperatures around 8--17 °C (46-63 °F). Faro receives most of its rainfall over the winter months; rain is very rare between June and
September. The annual average temperature is around 17 °
C (63 °F) - 18 °
C (64 °F) and the annual rainfall is around 500 mm (19.69 in). The average sea surface temperature is 15--16 °C (59-61 °F) in
January rising to 22-25 °C (72-77 °F) in August.