Pancas

Coordinates: 19°13′30″S 40°51′03″W / 19.22500°S 40.85083°W / -19.22500; -40.85083
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

19°13′30″S 40°51′03″W / 19.22500°S 40.85083°W / -19.22500; -40.85083

View of Pancas
View of Pancas from the paragliding ramp situated above the town The distinctive Pedra Camelo (Camel rock) can be seen at the far right of the photo

Pancas is a Brazilian municipality in the state of

East Pomeranian, a dialect of Low German
, has co-official status in Pancas.

It is situated on a tributary of the

Corcovado
in Rio de Janeiro.

History

Before the European colonizers arrived, the area was inhabited by Amerindians. The first European settlers founded a village called São Silvano, but that was destroyed by the local Amerindians. The first permanent residents arrived in 1918 looking for valuable minerals, but the region of the Doce River was practically uninhabited till 1925, it was then that the first bridge over the Doce River was built, called Florian Avidos Bridge, and this brought more people into the north of the state for the first time. The bridge primarily opened access to logging companies which brought more people and coffee plantations, opening their way to the valley where Pancas is situated. The first settlement in the area was founded in 1925, and was called Nossa Senhora Da Penha.

Immigrants to the town in the 1920s and 1930 included large numbers of ethnic Germans, and the German dialect of East Pomeranian (now almost extinct in Europe) is spoken in the area.

External links

References


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