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    Awaiting Your Return From Shore | 
    Manaus is the capital of the 
    State of Amazonas and the hub of the whole Amazon region. Located on the 
    banks of the Rio Negro, the “Meeting of the Waters” takes place four miles 
    from Manaus, where the Rio Solimões meets the Rio Negro to become the 
    Amazon. 
 The city we see today is primarily a product of the rubber boom. When steam 
    navigation in the mid-19th century opened up the jungle, it spurred the 
    rubber industry and mass immigration. Under Governor Eduardo Ribeiro the 
    famous Opera House and broad Parisian avenues were built. For the rich it 
    was a place of sheer luxury. Palaces and grandiose mansions were erected, 
    and time was passed with elaborate entertainment, dances and concerts. By 
    the turn of the century it was an opulent metropolis run by elegant people 
    who dressed and housed themselves as fashionably as their counterparts in 
    any large European city. In fact, the year 1899 saw Manaus as the first 
    Brazilian city to have trolley buses and the second one to have electric 
    lights in the streets. But the splendor of the “Paris in the Jungle” lasted 
    barely thirty years and when in 1914 the rubber market began to collapse the 
    city fell into a rapid decline.
 
 Today, Manaus has acquired new prosperity, largely due to the creation of a 
    free trade zone in 1966. Many new industries moved in, a modern 
    international airport opened in 1976, and the floating port was modernized 
    to cope with the new business. Manaus has become an aggressive commercial 
    and industrial center for an enormous region. Over half of the country’s 
    televisions are made here, and electronic goods can be bought at around a 
    third of what they cost elsewhere in Brazil. This has earned Manaus her new 
    name - “Hong Kong of the Amazon.”
 
 As a river port, Manaus presents an unforgettable spectacle. Although the 
    real attractions lie in the surrounding forests and tributaries, the city’s 
    most famous attraction is no doubt the opulent Teatro Amazonas. Completed in 
    1896 after 17 years of construction and at a cost of $3 million, the Opera 
    House recently underwent a lengthy restoration program and now shines once 
    more in its original splendor. There are also several interesting museums 
    with exhibits geared to provide insight into the human life and ecology of 
    the Amazon region.
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    Awaiting Your Return 
    From Shore | 
  
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    Complimentary 
    Spirits Await | 
    
    Return to Your 
    Suite and Sail Away to The Next Adventure | 
    
    Entertainment 
    and Dancing Await You |