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Aurélia de Souza (1866–1922), Chilean-born Portuguese painter; Sofia Martins de Sousa (1870–1960), Portuguese painter; Teresa Nunes Alves de Sousa (born 1979), visual artist; Katherine Swift (1956–2004), Irish-born Portuguese painter
He is the son of Portuguese emigrants who moved to the Portuguese colony in the 1950s. When he was 14 years old, some of his poetry was published in a local newspaper, Notícias da Beira . Three years later, in 1971, he moved to the capital Lourenço Marques (now Maputo ) and began to study medicine at the University of Lourenço Marques .
Bertina Lopes (July 11, 1924 – February 10, 2012) [1] was a Mozambican-born, Italian painter and sculptor. Lopes' work displays a deep African sensibility with saturated colours and bold compositions of mask-like figures and geometric forms. [2]
Rosa Lobato de Faria (1932–2010), scriptwriter, novelists, poet, songwriter Susana Félix (born 1975), songwriter Lília da Fonseca (1906-1991), feminist writer and journalist
This is a list of Portuguese writers, ... Maria Rosa Colaço (1935–2004), children's writer and journalist; Gaspar Correia (1492–1563), 16th-century historian;
Maputo, the capital city of Portuguese Mozambique since 1898, was founded as Lourenco Marques before this Overseas Province of Portugal, the so-called Portuguese East Africa where was the seat of the governor-general, became independent from the colonial power in 1975: the city got its present name on 3 February 1976, giving its name to one of the six districts into which the province was divided.
Da Cor do Pecado (English title: Shades of Sin) is a Brazilian telenovela produced and broadcast by TV Globo in the traditional 7pm timeslot between 26 January and 28 August 2004 with a total of 185 episodes, [1] replacing Kubanacan and preceding Começar de Novo.
The history of Maputo, the capital of Mozambique, traces its origins back over 500 years, when a fishing village developed by Maputo Bay on the site where the modern city of Maputo now stands. The first Europeans to discover the bay were Portuguese navigators led by António de Campo in 1502.