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Hospital da Trofa Trofa: Trofa Saúde SGPS, SA Hospital de Saint Louis Lisbon Société Française de Bienfaisance en Portugal Hospital de Santiago Setúbal: Luz Saúde: Hospital Particular de Viana do Castelo, Lda Viana do Castelo: Hospital Particular do Algarve, SA Portimão: Hospital Privado da Boa Nova Perafita: Trofa Saúde SGPS, SA
Trofa (Portuguese pronunciation: ⓘ) is a city and a municipality in the north of the Porto metropolitan area in Portugal, 18 kilometres (11 mi) from Porto. The population in 2021 was 38,548, [ 1 ] in an area of 72.02 square kilometres (27.81 sq mi). [ 2 ]
Costa Verde (English: Green Coast) is a tourist and coastal region of northwest Portugal, delimited by the river mouths of Minho in the north and Douro in the south. [1]The name of the region comes from the dominant colour of the dense vegetation of the land, the green (Verde in Portuguese), supported by abundant precipitation.
Braga's major sports club, Sporting Clube de Braga (SC Braga), was founded in 1921 and its main men's football team play in the top division of Portuguese football, the Primeira Liga, from Braga Municipal Stadium, carved out of the Monte Castro hill that overlooks the city.
The district of Braga (Portuguese: Distrito de Braga ⓘ) is a district in the northwest of Portugal.The district capital is the city of Braga, and it is bordered by the district of Viana do Castelo in the north, Vila Real in the east, Galicia (a Spanish autonomous community) in the northeast and Porto in the south.
Following the 1383-1385 interregnum, the municipalities of Gaia and Vila Nova de Rey were integrated into the broader Porto Territory (Termo do Porto), an administrative division governed from Porto. While the municipalities retained some local governance, much of their administrative, judicial, and ecclesiastical control shifted to Porto. [4]
Costa, Avelino Jesus da (1978), Liber Fidei Sanctae Bracarensis Ecclesiae (doc. 560) (in Portuguese), Braga, Portugal, p. 359 {}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher Almeida, Carlos Alberto Brochado de (1979), "A Rede Viária do Conventus Bracaraugustanus: Via Bracara Asturicam Quarta", Mínia , Braga, Portugal, pp. 61– 163 {{ citation ...
It has the role of teaching hospital of the University of Beira Interior, and is composed by two autonomous hospitals located in the neighbouring cities of Covilhã (Hospital Pêro da Covilhã), established in June 1908, and Fundão (Hospital do Fundão), [1] established on October 16, 1955.