Caruaru

Caruaru
Cidade de Caruaru
City
City of Caruaru
Urban landscape of Caruaru
Conceição Church
São João de Caruaru
Monte do Bom Jesus Chapel
Caruaru Fair
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Location of Caruaru in Pernambuco
Caruaru
Location of Caruaru in Brazil
Coordinates: 08°16′58″S 35°58′33″W / 8.28278°S 35.97583°W / -8.28278; -35.97583
Country Brazil
RegionNortheast
State Pernambuco
Intermediate RegionCaruaru
Neighboring municipalitiesNorth: Toritama, Vertentes, and Taquaritinga do Norte
South: Altinho and Agrestina
East: Bezerros, Frei Miguelinho, and Riacho das Almas
West: São Caetano and Brejo da Madre de Deus
Distance to capital130 kilometres (81 mi)
DistrictsCaruaru, Carapotós, Lajedo do Cedro, and Gonçalves Ferreira
Foundation18 May 1857 (1857-05-18)
Emancipation1 March 1893 (1893-03-01)
Government
 • MayorRodrigo Pinheiro (PSDB)
 • Term2025–2028
Area
 • City
923.150 km2 (356.430 sq mi)
 • Urban
(IBGE/2019)
59.51 km2 (22.98 sq mi)
Elevation
554 m (1,818 ft)
Population
 • City
378,048
 • Estimate 
(2025)
405,408
 • Density409.5/km2 (1,061/sq mi)
DemonymCaruaruense
Time zoneUTC-3 (Brasília Time)
Postal code
55000-000
Area code+55 81
ClimateSemi-arid
Climate classificationBSh
HDI (UNDP/2010)0.677
Gini coefficient (2024)0.488
GDP (IBGE/2020)R$7,518,244.06
GDP per capita (IBGE/2020)R$20,582.25
Websitewww.caruaru.pe.gov.br

Caruaru (Portuguese pronunciation: [caɾua'ɾu] listen) is a Brazilian municipality in the state of Pernambuco, located in the Northeast region of the country. It is part of the Caruaru Intermediate Geographic Region. According to the 2025 census, its population is 405,408 inhabitants, making it the second most populous municipality in the interior of Pernambuco and the fourth most populous in the Northeast countryside, surpassed only by Feira de Santana, Campina Grande, and Petrolina. The municipality is situated to the west of the state capital, Recife, approximately 130 kilometres (81 mi) away. It covers an area of 923.150 square kilometres (356.430 sq mi), of which 59.51 square kilometres (22.98 sq mi) is urban.

Founded on 18 May 1857, one account of its origin suggests that the municipality began to take shape in 1681 when the then-governor of the captaincy granted the Rodrigues de Sá family a sesmaria spanning thirty leagues, aimed at developing agriculture and cattle ranching in the region. However, a more widely accepted account considers a sesmaria charter granted in 1661 by Governor Fernão de Souza Coutinho to Captain Bernardo Vieira de Mello, a nobleman and knight of the Royal Household, who likely held lands that included Caruaru. A 1758 document recording an investigation into abuses committed by Bernardo’s son, Antônio Vieira de Mello, mentions "…in these my lands a site called Caruru, which my father settled eighty years ago…" (verbatim), dating the establishment of Caruru around 1678, when the area was demarcated and organized as a farm.

The name Caruru likely refers to the region and gave its name to a farm at the heart of what is now the city’s central landmark. Its strategic location and the entrepreneurial spirit of its inhabitants led to significant growth and rapid population increase, necessitating the construction of a chapel in 1782, dedicated to Our Lady of Conception. This chapel fostered a sense of community and visibility for the residents of the village and surrounding areas, eventually giving rise to the city. The chapel’s builder, José Rodrigues de Jesus, was not a native of the area but came from Cabo de Santo Agostinho, son of Plácido Rodrigues de Jesus and Lourença do Vale Pereira. He was married to Maria do Rosário, a native of Vitória de Santo Antão, and they had eleven children. Although it is claimed that the Rodrigues de Sá family is related to the Rodrigues de Jesus, no documentary evidence supports this.

According to the IBGE, Caruaru is a regional capital classified as category B, playing a significant centralizing role in the Agreste and countryside of Pernambuco. It is a major hub for medical-hospital services, academic institutions, culture, and tourism in the Agreste. The municipality is also renowned for its grand June Festivals. It hosts the Feira de Caruaru, recognized as the world’s largest open-air market and designated an intangible cultural heritage of Brazil by the National Institute of Historic and Artistic Heritage (IPHAN). Its clay craftsmanship gained worldwide recognition through the work of Vitalino Pereira dos Santos, known as Mestre Vitalino, who represented Pernambuco at the 1955 Brazilian Primitive and Modern Art Exhibition in Neuchâtel, Switzerland. His works are displayed at the Louvre Museum in Paris and at his former residence in the Alto do Moura neighborhood of Caruaru. Mestre Vitalino’s followers have made Caruaru the largest center of figurative art in the Americas, according to UNESCO.