Madeira, South Africa

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Madeira
South Africa Limpopo location map.svg
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Madeira
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Red pog.svg
Madeira
Coordinates: 24°15′43″S30°25′55″E / 24.262°S 30.432°E / -24.262; 30.432
Country South Africa
Province Limpopo
District Mopani
Municipality Maruleng
Area
[1]
  Total7.5 km2 (2.9 sq mi)
Population
 (2011) [1]
  Total3,844
  Density510/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)
[1]
   Black African 99.5%
   Coloured 0.03%
   Indian/Asian 0.1%
   White 0.01%
  Other0.01%
First languages (2011)
[1]
   Northern Sotho 95.5%
  Other4.5%
Time zone UTC+2 (SAST)
Postal code (street)
0890

Madeira is a village (in Tzaneen town) in Mopani District Municipality in the Limpopo province of South Africa.

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The Madeira Football Association is the regional governing body for the all football competitions in the former Portuguese district of Funchal, including both Madeira Island and Porto Santo Island. It is also the regulator of the clubs registered in the autonomous region.

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Madeira Airport, informally Funchal Airport, formerly Santa Catarina Airport and officially Cristiano Ronaldo International Airport, is an international airport in the civil parish of Santa Cruz in the Portuguese archipelago and autonomous region of Madeira. The airport is located 13.2 km (8.2 mi) east-northeast of the regional capital, Funchal, after which it is sometimes informally named. It mostly hosts flights to European metropolitan destinations due to Madeira's importance as a leisure destination, and is pivotal in the movement of cargo in and out of the archipelago of Madeira. It is the fourth-busiest airport in Portugal. The airport is named after Madeiran native Cristiano Ronaldo. During its renaming ceremony in 2017, the airport drew media notoriety for an infamous bust of Ronaldo unveiled at the ceremony, now replaced.

<i>Madeira</i> (ship) Barge that sank in Lake Superior in 1905

Madeira was a schooner barge that sank off the coast of Minnesota in Lake Superior on November 28, 1905. A schooner barge is a type of ship that functions like a barge, in that it is towed by a steamship, but also has sails like a schooner. This type of ship evolved from wooden sailing ships that were cut down into barges and towed behind wooden steamships, a practice which originated in the late 1880s in coastal areas. This design was commonly used in the Great Lakes for transporting grain, iron ore, and other products.

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Madeira Terrace, Madeira Walk, Madeira Lift, and Madeira Shelter Hall are an 865 m long, Victorian cast iron stretch of seafront arches and walkway, with integral former shelter hall and a 3-stage lift tower, on Madeira Drive in Brighton, UK. The complex was built between 1890 and 1897 and designed by the Brighton Borough Surveyor, Philip C. Lockwood. The various structures have a common design style and colour scheme, and form a unified whole. Madeira Terrace, Madeira Walk, the lift tower and related buildings are listed Grade II* on the National Heritage List for England, having been upgraded in 2020.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Main Place Madeira". Census 2011.