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1->"Lisboa menina e moça, menina/Da luz que meus olhos vêem tão pura/Teus seios são as colinas, varina/Pregão que me traz à porta, ternura/Cidade a ponto luz bordada/Toalha à beira mar estendida/Lisboa menina e moça, amada/Cidade mulher da minha vida"[[labelnote:translation]]"Lisbon, girl and maid, girl/From the light that my eyes see so pure/Your breasts are the hills, fishmonger/Cry that brings to my door, tenderness/City embroidered in ''ponto luz''/Towel extended at seaside/ Lisbon girl and maid, girl/City woman of my life"[[/labelnote]]
2-->-- [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDRM2dJQDws ''Lisboa menina e moça'']], by Carlos do Carmo
3
4Lisbon, aka ''A Cidade das Sete Colinas'' (The City of Seven Hills) or ''Rainha do Mar'' (Queen of the Sea), is the capital of UsefulNotes/{{Portugal}} and its largest city, where (almost) all economic, political and social life converges.
5
6It is one of the oldest cities in the world, founded c. 1200 BC during the Iberian Iron Age, and the oldest city in Western UsefulNotes/{{Europe}} putting it ahead of such cities as London, Paris and Rome by hundreds of years. It is reputed to have been founded by Ulisses[=/=]Odisseus of ''Literature/TheOdyssey'' fame.
7----
8!!The ''Bairros'' (Neighbourhoods/Quarters) and other subdivisions
9The city of Lisbon occupies the same space as the municipality (''município'') of Lisbon and is governed by the same municipal government (in Portugal, ''city'' is just a title given to municipalities and gives no extra powers of responsibilities to those who have it) and is politically subdivided into 24 ''freguesias'' or parishes (since 2012), however largely no one cares about these. (Seriously, whenever anyone talks about these, it's to say that there are ''[[SeriousBusiness 53]]'' of them, which it did before 2012.)
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11The (cultural) subdivisions people identify themselves with are the ''bairros'', or neighbourhoods/quarters, which have no defined borders (except for ''Parque das Nações'', which perfectly matches a parish) and represent special quarters with a common historical culture, identifiable architectural landmarks, livings standards and/or local personality. These are the ''bairros'', in alphabetical order:
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13* '''Alcântara''': since TheNineties, this area has become one of the most central areas of Lisbon, which attracts pubs and discos due to an outer layer of commercial buildings which act as barriers to the noise of the night to the residental buildings surrounding that layer, and is also gentrified, with lofts and other apartments, although it was once a quite peripheric area, at first attracting farms and palaces and, then, factories in the 19th century.
14* '''Alfama''': the oldest and poorest part of Lisbon, spreading down the southern slope from the Castle of São Jorge to the Tagus river. During the Islamic period it was the largest part of the city and unlike others it was only minimally destroyed during the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, thanks to its compact labyrinth of narrow streets and small squares. It is a historical quarter of mixed-use buildings of homes with small shops, Fado bars and restaurants. Modernizing trends have invigorated the district: old houses have been re-purposed or remodelled, while new buildings have been constructed. Fado, the typically Portuguese-style of melancholy music, is common (but not obligatory) in the restaurants of the district.
15* '''Bairro Alto''' (lit. ''upper quarter''): the heart of city's nightlife (even more so that Alcântara), it attracts the city's youth, it's a multicultural mix of cultures and entertainment and attracts Lisbon's Punk, Gay, Metal, Goth, Hip Hop and Reggae scenes.
16* '''Baixa Pombalina''' (lit. the ''Pombaline downtown''): the city's downtown and most elegant quarter, it was one of the most hit areas during the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, it was subsequently rebuilt using earthquake-resistant construction, of which the ''Baixa'' was one of the first examples. Its layout is also structured like a Manhattan-esque grid, in sharp contrast to the rest of the city. It was named after Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquess of Pombal, which was the benefactor and catalyzer of the rebuilding of this part of the city.
17* '''Belém''' (lit. ''Bethlehem''): from here the great Portuguese explorers set off on their voyages, such as Vasco da Gama to India in 1497 and Pedro Álvares Cabral to Brazil in 1499. In Belém there are some of the most important monuments and landmarks of Lisbon, such as the Belém National Palace (the royal residence before 1910 and now the official residence of the President of the Republic), the Ajuda National Palace, the Belém Tower (one of the international trademarks of Lisbon, along with the 25 de Abril bridge), the Jerónimos Monastery and the ''Padrão dos Descobrimentos'' (inaugurated in 1960 by the Salazar régime and celebrating Portugal's imperial past). There are also the ''Praça do Império'', a garden built during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII as part of the "Portuguese World Exhibit" (''Exposição do Mundo Português'') and the Belém Cultural Center (inaugurated 1993).
18* '''Chiado''': Lisbon's traditional shopping area, where you can especially find books, garments, pottery and coffeeshops, especially ''A Brasileira'', famous for having Creator/FernandoPessoa as a regular patron. It was victim of a fire in 1988, which greatly shocked Portugal, but it was renovated on a project that lasted more than ten years by celebrated architect Álvaro Siza Vieira.
19* '''Estrela''' (lit. ''Star''): The main building of cultural interest is the Baroque Estrela Basilica, but as the São Bento Palace (seat of the Assembly of the Republic, the parliament, and the official residences of the Prime Minister of Portugal and the President of the Assembly of the Republic, as well as a building of cultural interest on its own) is also located here, Estrela is the political center of Portugal.
20* '''Parque das Nações''' (lit. ''Nations' Park''): the only ''bairro'' to have well-defined borders (which correspond to the parish of, surprise, surprise, Parque das Nações) and former WretchedHive and decaying industrial area of Lisbon (it was once a heavily polluted area with containers, slaughterhouses and other polluting industries, and a den of prostitution), it all changed with the coming of the Expo '98 (so influential it is still sometimes called by this name, especially among older people). It is today a commercial and higher end residential area, as well as a transportation hub, for the city, and it has a futuristic look to it. Before 2012, portions of this ''bairro'' were in the neighbouring municipality of Loures (not that anyone, except its inhabitants, ever noticed, especially if you were foreign).
21** Note that the ''freguesia'' which corresponds to the Parque das Nações area was to be called ''Oriente'', which is still reflected in the ArtifactTitle of its Metro station.
22
23!!'''Popular landmarks'''
24* Symbols of Lisbon par excellence:
25** 25 de Abril Bridge
26** Belém Tower
27** Lisbon's electric trams, the ''elétricos''. The system is one of the few historic tram systems worldwide that survived the second half of the 20th century and still runs regularly scheduled services that are actually an integral part of the city's mainline transit network, rather than being just a touristic system (though a few touristic services do run on the tracks). It is also probably completely unique worldwide in using historic wooden tram vehicles in regular revenue service, largely because the old trams are the only things light and small enough to navigate Lisbon's steep hills and narrow, windy streets.[[note]]Like, UsefulNotes/{{Philadelphia}} and UsefulNotes/{{Toronto}} never completely got rid of their trolleys/streetcars/trams, but both of them have updated the rolling stock at least twice since 1920; Lisbon mostly hasn't. Of significance, Philadelphia actually does have hilly parts to rival Lisbon, but the trolleys don't go there, not anymore.[[/note]] A few modern articulated trams do operate on the system, but only on Line 15 (to the western coastal part of the city, running through Alcántara and Belém to Algés) and only on part of the route (the modern trams have to stop at Cais do Sodré station, as the eastern part of Line 15 runs through the kind of narrow, steep streets the bigger modern trams can't handle; the full Line 15 is run only by historic trams and by buses). Another interesting fact about the elétricos is their gauge: because of the aforementioned narrow, windy, hilly streets, the trams have a very narrow 900 mm gauge, which is one of the narrowest in the world in frequent revenue service.
28* The ''Elevador de Sta. Justa'' (Sta. Justa Elevator), said to have been designed by Gustave Eiffel, whose more famous piece of work was Paris's Eiffel Tower, although in RealLife it was designed by the French-Portuguese engineer Raoul Mesnier du Ponsard and by French architect Louis Reynaud.[[note]]Eiffel had an annoying habit of claiming credit for any large all-iron construction in Europe he could be remotely associated with. Two bridges in northern Portugal connecting Porto, Portugal's second city, with its twin city Vila Nova de Gaia, designed by the German engineer Théophile Seyrig, have also suffered the same fate. However, Mesnier, Reynaud, and Seyrig all worked with or for Eiffel in some way (being employees of or business partners with his firm), so they had to yield to the great man (presumably while biting their tongues).[[/note]]
29* Castle of St. George
30* National Theater of São Carlos
31* Luz Stadium[[labelnote:note]]Often incorrectly called "Stadium of Light" by foreign press. This is due to a [[BlindIdiotTranslation overtly literal translation]] of its original name "Estádio da Luz", with "Luz" being a reference to its ''address'', the Estrada da Luz ("Luz Road")[[/labelnote]] (a.k.a. ''the Cathedral'', it's Portugal's largest stadium and Benfica football/soccer club's home stadium)
32* Rossio Railway Station, the former central station of Lisbon, still has that name on its façade
33* Some things in Belém:
34** Belém Tower
35** Jerónimos Monastery
36** Ajuda National Palace
37** ''Padrão dos Descobrimentos''
38** ''Praça do Império''
39* The ''Praça do Comércio'', a.k.a. the ''Terreiro do Paço'', the quintessial Pombaline street
40* Parque das Nações (formerly and also commonly known as the Expo '98), a popular landmark in its own, also contains the following landmarks:
41** Altice Arena, formely known as MEO Arena, formerly known as the ''Pavilhão Atlântico'' and originally built as the ''Pavilhão da Utopia'', a multipurpose arena and hall;
42** ''Gare do Oriente'', which encompasses a Lisbon Metro station, a high-speed, commuter and regional train hub, a local, national and international bus station, a shopping centre and a police station and has 75 million passengers per year, i.e, as many as the Grand Central Terminal in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity;
43** Vasco da Gama Bridge;
44** The Lisbon Oceanarium;
45** The Lisbon Casino;
46** The ''Feira Internacional de Lisboa'' (FIL, International Lisbon Fair);
47** The ''Pavilhão do Conhecimento - Ciência Viva'' (Knowledge Pavilion - Live Science), originally known as the ''Pavilhão do Conhecimento dos Mares'' (Seas Knowledge Pavilion)
48** The Torre Vasco da Gama, the largest building in Portugal and also renovated as a hotel after being closed between 2001 and 2012 (before this, there existed a restaurant at the top between 1998 and 2001).
49** The Parque das Nações Marina.
50* The Monsanto Forest Park ([[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant nothing to do with]] ''[[PredatoryBusiness that]]'' [[PredatoryBusiness Monsanto]])
51* The Calouste Gulbenkian Museum and its surrounding gardens
52
53!!Lisbon in popular culture:
54
55* ''ComicBook/AsIncriveisAventurasDeDogMendoncaEPizzaboy''
56* ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedRogue'' is largely set in North America during the Seven Years' War, but a memorable and pivotal interlude takes place there amidst the 1755 earthquake that devastated the city (caused by a piece of Eden in the game, no less).
57* In ''VideoGame/CossacksEuropeanWars'', the shipyard of the Portuguese nation has the shape of the Belém Tower (and it's the only shipyard in the game that can fire with cannons like a [[TowerDefense defense tower]]).
58* Series/DepoisDoAdeus
59* In [[http://videos.sapo.pt/s6d42SN3qGzmH5izQFQR one episode]] of ''Series/HowIMetYourMother'', Marshall mentions to Barney that the Goliath National Bank (GNB) is making illegal experiments in the Lisbon water network and that the GNB can go to war with Portugal if their contracts are not well executed.
60* Part of one episode of Series/RelicHunter (ep. 53, ''Incognito'', to be more accurate) was filmed in Lisbon.
61* The 2013 movie ''Film/NightTrainToLisbon'', starring Jeremy Irons and Mélanie Laurent, among other famous actors.

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