Ipanema
Ipanema | ||
---|---|---|
Neighbourhood | ||
State Rio de Janeiro (RJ) | | |
Municipality/City | Rio de Janeiro | |
Zone | South Zone |
Ipanema (Portuguese pronunciation:
Etymology
The name Ipanema originally referred to a river in the state of São Paulo, its etymology deriving from the Tupi language words ipá (pond) and nem-a (stinking).[1] Possible translations for its original meaning are "worthless water", "stinking lake", "turbid water", or "water worthless for human consumption".[2] The historian Teodoro Sampaio translated Ipanema as "bad water".[3]
The neighbourhood in Rio de Janeiro was named after José Antonio Moreira Filho, the Baron of Ipanema, who in 1883 created the first urban settlement in the region.[4]
The border area between Copacabana and Ipanema is known locally as "Copanema".
History
Ipanema today consists mostly of land that once belonged to José Antonio Moreira Filho, Baron of Ipanema. The name "Ipanema" did not refer originally to the beach, but to the homeland of the baron at São Paulo.[5]
Character
Ipanema is adjacent to
Ipanema has played a cultural role in Rio de Janeiro since the city's beginning, with its own universities, art galleries, and theatres. It holds a street parade, the Banda de Ipanema, during Carnival festivities separate from those of Rio de Janeiro, attracting up to 50,000 people to the streets of Ipanema.
Beach
The beach at Ipanema is known for its elegant development and its social life. Two mountains called the Dois Irmãos (Two Brothers) rise at the western end of the beach, which is divided into segments delineated by postos, or lifeguard towers. Beer is sold everywhere, along with the traditional cachaça. There are always circles of people playing football, volleyball, and footvolley, a locally invented sport that is a combination of volleyball and football.
In the winter the
The beach is one of many areas that suffers from the city's poor waste treatment. In its waters, "fecal coliform bacteria sometimes spike at 16 times the Brazilian government's 'satisfactory' level."[6] Large amounts of pollutants are still dumped into the sea through the nearby marine outfall pipe, a matter of increasing concern to ecologists.[7]
Beachgoers often applaud the sunset in the summer.[8] In 2008, the Travel Channel listed Ipanema Beach as the sexiest beach in the world.[9]
Posto 9
Posto 9 is the section of the beach around the #9 lifeguard station, across from Joana Angelica Street. Its notoriety began around 1979 when
Gabeira became a political celebrity with the publication of a memoir about his experiences as a guerilla and his years in exile. In 1979, he was photographed wearing a skimpy purple swimsuit at Ipanema, and gave an interview to a gay and lesbian newspaper, inciting rumours that he was gay, which he neither confirmed nor denied. His going to the beach at Posto 9 made it famous throughout the country.[10][13]
Posto 9 inherited its status as a gathering spot for counter-cultural types from the area near
Feira Hippie de Ipanema
A group of hippies started a Sunday market in Ipanema in 1968 and the traditional fair continues with over 700 stalls set up at the Feira Hippie de Ipanema (Ipanema Hippie Market).
Cultural references
Ipanema gained fame with the rise of the popular
References
- ISBN 978-3-925203-66-4.
- ISBN 978-1-5260-1209-8.
Ipanema: Significa "água imprestável", "lago fedorento", "água turva", "água imprestável para o consumo humano"... Ypanema, da língua Yaathe, original da tribo Fulni-ô, também possui o mesmo significado de "água turva", "água imprestável para o consumo humano". English:"Ipanema" means "worthless water", "stinking lake", "turbid water", or "water worthless for human consumption"... Ypanema in the Yaathe language, originally from the Fulni-ô tribe, arose in reference to a river in the Sorocaba region, and means "turbid water" or "water that can not be used for human consumption."
- ^ Teodoro Sampaio (1901). O tupí na geographia nacional: memoria lida no Instituto historico e geographico de S. Paulo. Casa Eclectica. p. 156.
- ^ "Significado do nome dos Bairros do Rio de Janeiro". 13 April 2020.
- ^ "Significado do nome dos Bairros do Rio de Janeiro". 13 April 2020.
- ^ Ravenscroft, Nick (2 January 2014). "Filthy waters around Rio spark safety fears for Brazil Olympic sea sports". ITV News. ITV plc. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
- ^ "Biólogos alertam que emissário de Ipanema pode gerar danos à biodiversidade". 14 July 2014.
- ^ Robinson, Joe (24 July 2013). "8 of Brazil's best beaches". CNN.com. Retrieved 17 September 2014.
Beachgoers in Rio de Janeiro have been known to break into applause as the sun sets after a particularly fine day of bronzing.
- ^ "YouTube Video, Travel Channel, 2008". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
- ^ ISBN 978-85-7665-076-8.
- ISBN 978-0-299-29724-4.
- ISBN 978-0-19-028167-0.
- ISBN 978-0-299-29724-4.