Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Avenida Padre Manuel da Nobrega 14, 2º Esq. Lisboa 1 [2] In 1976, a national postal code system was introduced, with a four-digit structure, and designated addresses added "CODEX" (abbreviation of código extraordinário) to the postal location: Instituto de Hidráulicas e Recursos Hídricos Rua dos Bragas 4099 Porto CODEX [3]
Portugal changed to a closed telephone numbering plan on 31 October 1999; previously, the trunk prefix was '0', but this was dropped. [1]For landline subscribers, the area code, prefixed by the digit '2', was incorporated into the subscriber's number.
Bershka (Spanish: [ˈbeɾʃka, ˈbeɾska]) is a Spanish clothing retailer founded in 1998 in Spain. It is part of the Spanish Inditex group (which also owns brands such as Zara , Massimo Dutti , Pull&Bear , Oysho , Uterqüe , Stradivarius and Zara Home ).
ISO 3166-2:PT is the entry for Portugal in ISO 3166-2, part of the ISO 3166 standard published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), which defines codes for the names of the principal subdivisions (e.g., provinces or states) of all countries coded in ISO 3166-1.
The Lisbon Metropolitan Area (Portuguese: Área Metropolitana de Lisboa; abbreviated as AML) is a metropolitan area in Portugal centered on Lisbon, the capital and largest city of the country. The metropolitan area, covering 17 cities in 18 municipalities , is the largest urban area in the country and the 10th largest in the European Union ...
Porto Salvo (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈpoɾtu ˈsalvu]) is a civil parish in the municipality of Oeiras, Portugal. It is situated to the north of the parish of Oeiras e São Julião da Barra, Paço de Arcos e Caxias .
"Portugal", Freedom of the Press, US: Freedom House, 2015, OCLC 57509361 in Portuguese Carlos Augusto da Silva Campos, ed. (1886), "Jornaes de Lisboa, Provincias e Ilhas" , Almanach Commercial de Lisboa (in Portuguese), pp. 437– 441
The first provinces, instituted during the Roman occupation of the Iberian peninsula, divided the peninsula into three areas: Tarraconensis, Lusitania and Baetica, established by Roman Emperor Augustus between 27 and 13 B.C. [1] Emperor Diocletian reordered these territories in the third century, dividing Tarraconesis into three separate territories: Tarraconensis, Carthaginensis and Gallaecia.