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Administrative divisions of continental Portugal, including districts, NUTS and historical provinces. This is the list of the municipalities of Portugal under the NUTS 2 and NUTS 3 format. The NUTS 3 regions were revised in 2015; since then, the subregions (NUTS 3) coincide with the intermunicipal communities. [1]
The subdivisions of Portugal are based on a complicated administrative structure. The second-level administrative division , after the 7 regions and 2 autonomous regions , is 308 municipalities ( concelhos ) which are further subdivided into 3091 civil parishes ( freguesias ).
The nine regions of Portugal are likewise subdivided into 25 subregions (Portuguese: subregiões) that, from 2015, represent the 2 metropolitan areas, the 21 intermunicipal communities and the 2 autonomous regions. Therefore, since the 2013 revision (enforced in 2015), the Portuguese subregions have a statutory and administrative relevance.
A plan to divide mainland Portugal in eight regions was defeated in a referendum in 1998. [2] The metropolitan areas of Lisbon and Porto were created in 1991. [ 5 ] A law passed in 2003 supported the creation of more metropolitan areas, urban communities and other associations of municipalities, [ 6 ] but a law passed in 2008 abolished these ...
Portugal has 18 districts and 2 autonomous regions (Azores and Madeira). Population figures are from the 2021 census. [1] ... Portugal: 10,343,066: 92,104: 112.3 ...
The term "provinces" (Portuguese: províncias) has been used throughout history to identify regions of continental Portugal. Current legal subdivisions of Portugal do not coincide with the provinces, but several provinces, in their 19th- and 20th-century versions, still correspond to culturally relevant, strongly self-identifying categories ...
Portugal's two island territories, the Azores and Madeira are also NUTS2 regions. This system does not coincide with main system of local government subdivisions in Portugal. See Subdivisions of Portugal for further details. The historical regions and provinces of Portugal, which had entirely different boundaries from the modern regions, were ...
The 1976 Portuguese Constitution specifies that Portugal has only, as first-level divisions, the autonomous regions (Azores and Madeira) and the administrative regions (to be created in mainland Portugal). According to the Constitution, the districts shall be disestablished in territories in which an autonomous or administrative region has been ...