Cantagalo () is a city located in the east-central area of
Rio de Janeiro State,
Brazil. The population, according to the 2004 census, is 20,557. Its area is 749 km² and the elevation is 391m. The
population density is 25,4/km².
Colonization of Cantagalo began in 1755, when
Portuguese nobleman Manoel Henriques, Duke of Terso and a clandestine
gold miner left the state of
Minas Gerais in search of unexplored riches. Henriques and his group erected a settlement and began exploring the banks of local rivers. By 1784, the settlement had grown to accommodate approximately 200 houses. This growth caught the attention of the Portuguese rulers of Brazil, who had a
monopoly over gold exploration in the
colony. By order of Dom Luiz de Vasconcelos e Souza, viceroy of Brazil, several expeditions were sent to the woods around Cantagalo (then called Sertões de Macacu, after the river Macacu) in search of Henriques and his group. The municipality's current name (in Portuguese, the crowing of a
rooster), was inspired by the circumstances around his capture. A troop was about to return to their camp after a day of searching in vain around the woods, when a soldier heard the crowing of a rooster nearby and decided to further explore the area. One of Henriques' men was found in a clearing in the woods and, in exchange for his release, revealed the whereabouts of the rest of the group. Henriques was deported to Africa in dishonour. By 1786, the settlement's name had been officially...
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