Azambuja


Azambuja, officially the Town of Azambuja, is a municipality in the Portuguese district of Lisbon, in the historical region of Ribatejo. The population in 2011 was 21,814, in an area of 262.66 km2. Until 2004, the municipality was part of the Lisbon Metropolitan Area, when they left the metropolitan area and joined into the NUTS III statistical subregion of Lezíria do Tejo.

History

The town is so old that there is no longer any surviving record of when it received the privileged status embodied in a municipal charter. The town's current name is derived from the name given to it by Muslims of Iberia, who referred to it as "Azzabuja".
In 1963 Ford opened a vehicle assembly plant in Azambuja. In 2000 the plant was integrated into the nearby vehicle assembly business of General Motors. Opel Combo vans were assembled until the end of 2006 when the plant was closed and production transferred to the manufacturer's plant at Figueruelas near Zaragoza, Spain.

Geography

The municipality is limited to the north by Rio Maior, to the northeast Santarém, to the east Cartaxo, to the southeast Salvaterra de Magos, to the south Benavente and Vila Franca de Xira and to the west by Alenquer and Cadaval.
Its seat is the town with the same name, which has 6,900 inhabitants and occupies the parish also named Azambuja. The total number of parishes is 7.

Demographics

Parishes

Administratively, the municipality is divided into 7 civil parishes :