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    Portobello
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  1. portobello mushroom, (Agaricus bisporus), widely cultivated edible mushroom. One of the most commonly consumed mushrooms in the world, the fungus is sold under a variety of names and at various stages of maturity in brown, white, and off-white forms.

  2. Portobelo, village, east-central Panama. It is situated along the Caribbean Sea coast, about 20 miles (32 km) northeast of Colón. The name Portobelo, meaning “beautiful harbour,” was given by Christopher Columbus in 1502; the village was founded in 1597.

  3. Understand. [edit] Batería Baja de San Fernando. Portobelo was founded in 1597 by Spanish explorer Francisco Velarde y Mercado. From the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries it was an important silver-exporting port in New Granada on the Spanish Main and one of the ports on the route of the Spanish treasure fleets.

  4. Portobelo. In the province of Colón, facing the Caribbean Sea, you'll find Portobelo. Legend has it that Columbus named Portobelo as soon as he saw it. The color of its deep blue sea, the white of its beaches, along with the intense green of its forests and mangroves, deserve no other name: it is a beautiful port.

  5. Mar 10, 2023 · Though the Spanish no longer ship their treasures from Portobelo back across the Atlantic to mainland Spain, Portobelo remains something of a cultural hub. In fact, there are colonial Spanish remnants that have been recognized as UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

  6. Portobelo. Panama, Central America. This Caribbean fishing village is so laid-back and languorous, it's hard to imagine it was once the greatest Spanish port in Central America. Mules carried Peruvian gold and Oriental treasures to Panama City via the fortresses at Portobelo. Though English privateers destroyed them many times throughout their ...

  7. Portobelo and San Lorenzo were Spanish fortifications on the Caribbean coast of Panama. Portobelo even was the most important Spanish port of Central America in its time, the storehouse for the silver and gold that came from Peru by land or sea/river and had to be transported across the Atlantic.

  8. Portobelo national park is an area of immense importance to the history buff who is inquisitive about the early colonial Spanish days in the Caribbean area. The quiet, rural and rustic community is situated along the shores of a strategically sheltered, picturesque bay along the Caribbean Sea.

  9. The Portobelo district is its own tiny tropical universe. Its offerings include a national park, multiple beaches, and idyllic islands, all surrounded by rainforest. You can surf, sail, snorkel, and much, much more.

  10. Once the greatest Spanish port city in Central America during the gold trade, Portobelo succumbed to piracy in the 16th and 17th centuries, now left with ruins of colonial fortifications and legends that pervade the seaside air.