Tete

Mozambique
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Tete, port city, west-central Mozambique. Tete is situated on the right bank of the Zambezi River near the rich coal mines of Moatize. Under Portuguese influence Tete had become a market centre for ivory and gold by the mid-17th century. Given a town charter in 1761, it became a city in 1959. It is connected to the Indian Ocean by railway to the port of Beira and by the Zambezi River.

About 80 miles (125 km) northwest of Tete is the Cahora Bassa dam and hydroelectric-power project on the Zambezi River; Lake Cahora Bassa, created by the dam, extends about 150 miles (240 km) west to the Zambian border. The Cahora Bassa project supplies power to South Africa, Maputo city, Tete, and the coal mines at Moatize. The climate and soils of the Angonia Highlands favour some cattle raising and the cultivation of cassava and sorghum. Pop. (2007 prelim.) 152,909.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Albert.