Outline of Mozambique

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Mozambique:

The Coat of arms of Mozambique
The location of Mozambique
An enlargeable map of the Republic of Mozambique

Mozambique sovereign country located in southeastern Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean to the east, Tanzania to the north, Malawi and Zambia to the northwest, Zimbabwe to the west and Swaziland and South Africa to the southwest.[1] Mozambique was explored by Vasco da Gama in 1498 and colonized by Portugal in 1505. By 1510, the Portuguese had control of all of the former Arab sultanates on the east African coast. From about 1500, Portuguese trading posts and forts became regular ports of call on the new route to the east.

It is a member of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries and the Commonwealth of Nations. Mozambique (Moçambique) was named after Muça Alebique, a sultan.

General reference

An enlargeable basic map of Mozambique

Geography

An enlargeable topographic map of Mozambique

Geography of Mozambique

 Malawi 1,569 km
 Zimbabwe 1,231 km
 Tanzania 756 km
 South Africa 491 km
 Zambia 419 km
 Swaziland 105 km
  • Coastline: 2,470 km
  • Population of Mozambique: 21,397,000 - 53rd most populous country
  • Area of Mozambique: 801,590 km2
  • Atlas of Mozambique

Environment

An enlargeable satellite image of Mozambique

Natural geographic features

Regions

Regions of Mozambique

Ecoregions

List of ecoregions in Mozambique

  • Ecoregions in Mozambique

Administrative divisions

Administrative divisions of Mozambique

Provinces

Provinces of Mozambique

Districts

Districts of Mozambique

Municipalities

Demography

Demographics of Mozambique

Government and politics

Politics of Mozambique

Branches of the government

Government of Mozambique

Executive branch of the government

Legislative branch of the government

Judicial branch of the government

Court system of Mozambique

Foreign relations

Foreign relations of Mozambique

International organization membership

The Republic of Mozambique is a member of:[1]

Law and order

Law of Mozambique

Military

Military of Mozambique

Local government

Local government in Mozambique

History

History of Mozambique

  • Current events of Mozambique

Culture

Culture of Mozambique

Art

Sports

Sports in Mozambique

Economy and infrastructure

Economy of Mozambique

Education

Education in Mozambique

gollark: Interesting fact; seawater contains 3µg/L of uranium. If mages can function as sieves and process large quantities of seawater, [REDACTED].
gollark: Pulling gold from a few km underground is about as energy-intensive as firing bullets or dropping 100kg weights on people's heads from 50m up, which somehow people don't do?
gollark: There isn't just gold *everywhere* underground.
gollark: Was it just a really gold-rich area for some reason?
gollark: How do you even *get* pure gold from arbitrary ground locations, in significant quantities?

See also

Mozambique

References

  1. "Mozambique". The World Factbook. United States Central Intelligence Agency. 3 July 2009. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  2. The only glaciers in Africa are on Mt Kenya (in Kenya), on Kilimanjaro (in Tanzania), and in the Ruwenzori Mountains (which are located in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo). See Proceedings of the Riederalp Workshop, September 1978; Actes de l'Atelier de Riederalp, septembre 1978): IAHS-AISH Publ. no. 126, 1980.
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