eveloped under Portuguese rule and achieved great importance
as a lively cosmopolitan city. It was served by British, Portuguese and German
liners, and the majority of its imported goods were shipped at Southampton,
Lisbon and Hamburg. With the continuous growth of the city's population and its
expanding economy centered on the seaport, from the 1940s, Portugal's
administration built a network of primary and secondary schools, industrial and
commercial schools as well as the first university in the region - the
University of Lourenço Marques opened in 1962. Portuguese, Islamic (including
Ismailis), Indian (including from Portuguese India) and Chinese (including
Macanese) communities managed to achieve great prosperity - but not the
unskilled African majority - by developing the industrial and commercial
sectors of the city. Prior to Mozambique's independence in 1975, thousands of
tourists from South Africa and Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) frequented the city and
its scenic beaches, high-quality hotels, restaurants, casinos and brothels. The
Mozambique Liberation Front, or FRELIMO, formed in Tanzania in 1962. Led by
Eduardo Mondlane, FRELIMO fought for independence from Portuguese rule. The
Mozambican War of Independence lasted over 10 years, ending only in 1974 when
the Estado Novo regime was overthrown in Lisbon by a leftist military coup -
the Carnation Revolution. The new government of Portugal granted independence
to all Portuguese overseas territories.
After
independence from Portugal
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