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・ São João do Paraíso River
・ São João do Paraíso, Maranhão
・ São João do Pau d'Alho
・ São João do Piauí
・ São João do Polêsine
・ São João do Rio do Peixe
・ São João do Sabugi
・ São João do Soter
・ São João do Sul
・ São João do Tigre
・ São João do Triunfo
・ São João dos Angolares
・ São João dos Patos
・ São João Evangelista
・ São João Grande River
São João National Theatre
・ São João Nepomuceno
・ São João Pequeno River
・ São João River
・ São João River (Canoas River)
・ São João River (Cubatão River)
・ São João River (Iguazu River)
・ São João River (Ji-Paraná River)
・ São João River (Mato Grosso do Sul)
・ São João River (Mato Grosso)
・ São João River (Minas Gerais)
・ São João River (Negro River)
・ São João River (Paraná River)
・ São João River (Pernambuco)
・ São João River (Pitangui River)


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São João National Theatre : ウィキペディア英語版
São João National Theatre

The São João National Theatre ((ポルトガル語:Teatro Nacional São João)) is a theatre in the city of Porto, in Portugal. It is located in Batalha Square, in the historical centre of the city.
The history of the theatre begins in 1794, when the main authority of Porto, Francisco de Almada e Mendonça, encharged Italian architect Vicente Mazzoneschi with the project for an opera house. The original theatre was built between 1796 and 1798 and was named ''São João'' (St John) in honour of Prince-regent João, later crowned king as John VI of Portugal. The interior of the theatre was similar to São Carlos Theatre of Lisbon, built a little earlier.
The first São João Theatre was destroyed by a fire in 1908. A rebuilding project started in 1911 under the direction of Porto architect José Marques da Silva. The inner concert hall is horseshoe-shaped and has a ceiling painted by artists José de Brito and Acácio Lino, while the entrance hall is decorated with sculptural work by Henrique Araújo Moreira, Diogo de Macedo and José Fernandes de Sousa Caldas. On the main façade, of sober design, there are four reliefs representing four feelings: ''Kindness'', ''Pain'', ''Hatred'' and ''Love'', created by Diogo de Macedo and Sousa Caldas.
The new theatre was finished in 1918 but was reinaugurated only in 1920, with Verdi's ''Aida''. Initially, the theatre was dedicated to opera and theatre, but after 1932 it was turned into a cinema. Only in 1992, when it was bought by the Portuguese government, was the theatre completely restored to its former glory and renamed São João National Theatre. It is nowadays the main theatre venue in the city and one of the most important in the country.
==References==

*(São João National Theatre in the Portuguese Institute of Architectonic Heritage )

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