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Beja ((:ˈbɛʒɐ)) is a city and a municipality in the Alentejo region, Portugal. The population in 2011 was 35,854,〔(Instituto Nacional de Estatística ). Ine.pt. Retrieved on 2015-10-27.〕 in an area of 1146.44 km².〔(Direção-Geral do Território ). None. Retrieved on 2015-10-27.〕 The city proper had a population of 21,658 in 2001.〔(UMA POPULAÇÃO QUE SE URBANIZA, Uma avaliação recente – Cidades, 2004 ) Nuno Pires Soares, Instituto Geográfico Português (Geographic Institute of Portugal)〕 The municipality is the capital of the Beja District. The present Mayor is João Rocha, elected by the Portuguese Communist Party with an absolute majority in the 2009 Portuguese Legislative elections.〔(Beja – PS conquista Câmara à CDU com maioria absoluta ) Diário de Notícias, October 2009. Retrieved June 2012〕 The municipal holiday is Ascension Day. The Portuguese Air Force has an airbase in the area – the Air Base No. 11. ==History== Situated on a hill, commanding a strategic position over the vast plains of the Baixo Alentejo, Beja was already an important place in antiquity. Already inhabited in Celtic times,〔(La contribution de la prospection géomagnétique pour la compréhension de la paléoforme de Matabodes (Beja, Portugal) | António José Marques da Silva ). Academia.edu (1970-01-01). Retrieved on 2015-10-27.〕 the town was later named ''Pax Julia'' by Julius Caesar in 48 BCE, when he made peace with the Lusitanians. He raised the town to be the capital of the southernmost province of Lusitania (Santarém and Braga were the other capitals of the ''conventi''). During the reign of emperor Augustus the thriving town became "Pax Augusta". It was already then a strategic road junction. When the Visigoths took over the region, the town, then called Paca, became the seat of a bishopric. Saint Aprígio (died in 530) became the first Visigothic bishop of Paca. The town fell to the invading Umayyad army in 713. Starting in 910 there were successive attempts of conquest and reconquest by the Christian kings. With the collapse of the Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba in 1031, Beja became a taifa, an independent Muslim-ruled principality. In 1144 the governor of Beja ((アラビア語:باجة الزيت)), Sidray ibn Wazir, helped the rebellion of the ''Muridun'' (disciples) led by Abul-Qasim Ahmad ibn al-Husayn al-Quasi in the Algarve against power of Seville. In 1150 the town was captured by an army of the Almohads, who annexed it to their North African empire. It was retaken in 1162 by Fernão Gonçalves, leading the army of the Portuguese king Afonso I. In 1175 Beja was recaptured again by the Almohads. It stayed under Muslim rule till 1234 when king Sancho II finally recaptured the town from the Moors. All these wars depopulated the town and gradually reduced it to rubble. Only with Manuel I in 1521 did Beja again reach the status of city. It was attacked and occupied by the Portuguese and the Spanish armies during the Portuguese Restoration War (1640–1667). Beja became again the head of a bishopric in 1770, more than a thousand years after the fall of the Visigothic city. In 1808 Napoleonic troops under General Junot sacked the city and massacred the inhabitants. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Beja, Portugal」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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