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  2. Culture of Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Macau

    The worldwide popularity of Cantonese food and Chinese martial arts (kung fu or wu shu) has made them popular in Portugal as well. In 1998, the first Festival da Lusofonia took place in Macau, a festival of Portuguese-speaking communities. In November 2013, the 16th edition of the festival took place over the duration of two and a half days ...

  3. Macanese cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macanese_cuisine

    Macanese cuisine (Chinese: 澳門土生葡菜, Portuguese: culinária macaense) is mainly influenced by Chinese cuisine, especially Cantonese cuisine and European cuisine, especially Portuguese cuisine and influences from Southeast Asia and the Lusophone world, due to Macau's past as a Portuguese colony and long history of being an international tourist gambling centre.

  4. Tourism in Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Macau

    Macau is known as the “Monte Carlo of the Orient” and the “Las Vegas of the East”, which is attributed to the large volume of casinos that are found within the city. [2] In fact, Macau is the only location in China where gambling is legal, and as such, gambling tourism is the city’s greatest source of revenue, and, the greatest ...

  5. Macau, City of Commerce and Culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macau,_City_of_Commerce...

    Macau, City of Commerce and Culture is a 1987 collection edited by R. D. Cremer and originally published by University of East Asia (UEA) Press, now the University of Macau Press. A second edition was published by API Press in 1991. The book discusses aspects of Macau.

  6. Macanese people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macanese_people

    Portuguese culture dominates the Macanese, but Chinese cultural patterns are also significant. The community acted as the interface between Portuguese merchant settlers or ruling colonial government – Portuguese who knew little about the Chinese – and the Chinese majority (90% of population) who knew equally little about the Portuguese.

  7. Historic Centre of Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_Centre_of_Macau

    The Historic Centre of Macao (Portuguese: Centro Histórico de Macau, Chinese: 澳門歷史城區) is a collection of over twenty locations that witness the unique assimilation and co-existence of Chinese and Portuguese cultures in Macau, a former Portuguese colony. It represents the architectural legacies of the city's cultural heritage ...

  8. Sovereignty at the Edge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovereignty_at_the_Edge

    Eva Po Wah Hung (Chinese: 孔寶華) of the University of Macau argued that the book was "very well-written". [10] Arguing that the Portuguese colonisation of Macau had not accomplished its goals, Hung stated that she disagreed with the author's interpretation of Macau history being "representing a more flexible type of sovereignty." [9]

  9. Macau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macau

    Macau is located at the bottom-right of the region. Map of Macau. Macau is located on China's southern coast, 60 km (37 mi) west of Hong Kong, on the western side of the Pearl River estuary. It is surrounded by the South China Sea in the east and south, and neighbours the Guangdong city of Zhuhai to the west and north. [102]