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Mazagão (Portuguese: Município de
Mazagão, [mazɐˈɡɐ̃w]) is a muni****lity
located in the
south of the
state of Amapá in Brazil. Its po****tion is 22,053...
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Mazagão Velho is a
district and town in the
Brazilian muni****lity of
Mazagão, in the
state of Amapá. The town was
founded in 1773 by
refugees from the...
- Mazagaon, also
spelled Mazgaon and
Mazagon (Portuguese era
Mazagão), and
pronounced by the
Christian Bombay East
Indians as 'Mazgon' or 'Maz-a-gon' and...
- the
Portuguese at the
beginning of the 16th
century and
named Mazagan (
Mazagão in Portuguese), was
given up by the
Portuguese in 1769 and incorporated...
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Mazagão Atlético Clube,
commonly known as
Mazagão (Brazilian Portuguese: [mazaˈɡɐ͂w]), is a
Brazilian football club
based in
based in
Mazagão, Amapá....
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important state road is the AP-010
which connects Macapá with
Santana and
Mazagão Velho.
There are no road
connections to
other Brazilian states. In Laranjal...
- also
known as the
Great Siege of
Mazagan (Portuguese:
Grande Cerco de
Mazagão) was an
armed engagement that took
place in the
modern city of El Jadida...
- 1684 and
drove the
Spanish from
Larache in 1689. The
Portuguese abandoned Mazagão,
their last
territory in Morocco, in 1769. However, the
siege of Melilla...
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Tocantins 2,639 777,308 11,796 Atuã 2,769 119.8 Anajás 300 24,082.5 948
Mazagão 1,250.2 44.4 Vila Nova 5,383.8 180.8
Matapi 2,487.4 81.7 Acará, Guamá 400...
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abandonment of the last
North African holding in
Mazagan (Portuguese:
Mazagão; lost by
Portugal in 1769).
During the 19th century, a
serious clash between...