Toritama

Toritama is a municipality in the Brazilian state of Pernambuco, in the mesoregion of Agreste Pernambucano. It is located at an altitude of 349 m, and it is 153 km west of the capital Recife. In 2009 has an estimated population of 33,206 and an area of 30,93 km², which makes it the smallest municipality of Pernambuco, if Fernando de Noronha is not taken into account. Toritama is best knowns for its production and sale of textiles, in particular jeans.

Toritama
Municipality
The Municipality of Toritama
Nickname(s): 
"Capital do Jeans" (Capital of Jeans )
Location of Toritama in the State of Pernambuco
Coordinates: 07°58′56″S 36°03′03″W
Country Brazil
RegionNortheast
State Pernambuco
FoundedDecember 29, 1953
Government
  MayorEdilson Tavares da Silva (PMDB)
Area
  Total30.930 km2 (11.942 sq mi)
Elevation
349 m (1,145 ft)
Population
 (2012)[1]
  Total37,631
  Density1,200/km2 (3,200/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC-3 (UTC-3)
HDI (2010)0.618 – medium[2]

History

In the middle of the 19th century, Toritama was a cattle farm on the left bank of the Capibaribe River. The name Toritama comes from the indigenous words tori ("stone") and tama ("region"), in allusion to the 30-m tall stones that give the impression of a tower on the right bank of the Capibaribe. The area became a municipality on December 29, 1953; before that it consisted of the districts of Vertentes and Taquaritinga do Norte. The municipality had as its first provisional administrators Joaquim Aurélio Correia de Araújo and Antônio Manoel da Silva. The first elected mayor was José Jota de Araújo, three and a half years after the municipality's creation.

Tourism

Toritama has also made an effort to increase its tourism potential. Outside of the market square, 70 percent of the vehicles have license plates from another city in Brazil.

Economy

Toritama produces 15% of the Brazilian jeans

The city's location on a seasonal river which doesn't provide sufficient water for irrigation compelled the population to make a living in industrial activities. The municipality became a significant center of footwear manufacture in the 1970s. However, thereafter the industry declined due to strong competition from major footwear producers, which resulted in the factories producing leather shoes entering a period of decline and rapidly going bankrupt. The population then moved into the manufacture of jeans. The industry grew rapidly, and now 15 percent of the jeans produced in Brazil are made in Toritama. Attracted by their quality and low price, consumers from all over Brazil come to Toritama to buy and resell the jeans.

The Parque das Feiras (market square) is where the city's commerce is concentrated and the majority of the town's clothing stores are located. Located on the BR 104, it has an area of nine hectares divided into stalls, plus restaurants and a parking lot with space for 2000 vehicles. It was opened in September 2001, with 875 stalls of three square meters each, but the endeavor was so successful that it was subsequently enlarged by 1518 stalls.

This article, is based until hear on a translation of the corresponding article on the Portuguese Wikipedia.

Economic Indicators

Population [3] GDP x(1000 R$).[4] GDP pc (R$) PE
33.206 122.928 4.111 0.20%

Economy by Sector 2006

Primary sector Secondary sector Service sector
0.58% 17.22% 82.20%

Health Indicators

[5]

HDI (2010) Hospitals (2007) Hospitals beds (2007) Children's Mortality every 1000 (2005)
0.618 1 31 21

Largest Jeans Producers

  • Truppe Jeans, Tavernit Jeans, Zigurat Jeans, Rota do Mar, Ofir and Karenkiss.[6]
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References

  1. "2012 Populational Estimate" (PDF). Censo Populacional 2012. Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). July 2012. Retrieved September 9, 2012.
  2. - UNDP
  3. http://www.ibge.gov.br/home/estatistica/populacao/estimativa2009/POP2009_DOU.pdf IBGE Population 2009 Toritama, page 35]
  4. Toritama 2007 GDP IBGE page 32 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  5. PE State site - City by city profile
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2009-11-25.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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