Pemba is a port city in Mozambique. It is the capital of the
province of Cabo Delgado and lies on a peninsula in Pemba Bay.
The town was founded by the Niassa Company in 1904 as Porto Amélia,
after a queen of Portugal, at the peninsula's south western tip
and has grown around a port. The city is renowned for its Portuguese
colonial architecture.[1] It was renamed Pemba at the end of Portuguese
rule, in 1975.
The city's inhabitants are primarily Makondes, Macuas and Mwanis.
Local languages that are spoken are Kimwani and Macua, although
Portuguese is widespread.
In the centre of Pemba, there is an authentic local market or Souk,
where arts and crafts, as well as traditional silverware can be
bought.
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