Araçuaà() is a Brazilian municipality located in the northeast of the state of Minas Gerais in the Jequitinhonha River valley. The AraçuaàRiver, a tributary of the Jequitinhonha, flows through it. Its population was estimated to be 36,712 people living in a total area of 2,235 km<sup>2</sup>. The city belongs to the mesoregion of Jequitinhonha and the microregion of AraçuaÃÂ. The city is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of AraçuaÃÂ. The elevation of the municipal seat is 307 meters. It became a municipality in 1870.
Between the municipalities of Araçuaàand Itinga is located the largest lithium mine in Brazil, explored and extracted by Sigma Lithium Resources.
The origin of the name "AraçuaÃÂ" has two versions: according to Auguste de Saint-Hilaire, the name was given by the paulistas to the river because they had found a large quantity of gold in it. They exclaimed: "ouro só ali" ("only gold there"), and from this phrase Araçuaàwas created. According to philologist Eduardo de Almeida Navarro, Araçuaàcomes from the Tupi language, through the composition of the words araso'iá () and <nowiki/>'y (river), therefore meaning "river of the araçoias".
Until 1857, the place was called Calhau, due to the large quantity of pebbles (calhais) in the region.
Before the arrival of the Europeans, the current municipality of Araçuaàwas inhabited by the Tocoió and Botocudo indigenous.
The priest Carlos Pereira de Moura had founded the Aldeia do Pontal, currently . The village was located next to the confluence of two large rivers: the Jequitinhonha and the AraçuaÃÂ. The village had a set of qualities to evolve into a city, such as easy access to canoes, used at the time for navigating rivers, but the priest was excessively demanding and authoritarian, prohibiting alcoholic beverages and prostitutes there. So, the prostitutes emigrated up the AraçuaàRiver, and the canoeists changed ports, attracted by them.
The prostitutes were sheltered by Luciana Teixeira, owner of the Fazenda da Boa Vista da Barra do Calhau, on her lands on the right bank of the Calhau and Araçuaàstreams. This became the landing point for the canoes that went up the Jequitinhonha. Luciana started a village on her land in 1817.
Over time, the place gained importance. It was established under the name Vila de Arassuahy on July 1, 1871, and on September 21 of the same year it was elevated to the category of city, with the name AraçuaÃÂ.
Until 1911, the city was the capital of the entire northeast of Minas Gerais. In 1882, the Bahia and Minas Railway was built, connecting the Bahian city of Caravelas to AraçuaÃÂ, but it was deactivated and closed in 1966.
Today, Araçuaàis considered one of the commercial and educational centers of the Jequitinhonha valley.
According to the regional division in force since 2017, established by the IBGE, the municipality belongs to the Intermediate Geographic Region of Teófilo Otoni and Immediate Geographic Region of AraçuaÃÂ. Until then, with the divisions into microregions and mesoregions in force, it was part of the microregion of AraçuaÃÂ, which in turn was included in the mesoregion of Jequitinhonha.
The maximum temperature of 44.8 ðC (112.6 ðF) recorded on November 19, 2023, in AraçuaÃÂ, is considered the highest ever maximum temperature recorded in Brazil.
The city's GDP is around R$520 million reais, with 50.3% of the added value coming from services, followed by public administration (33.6%), industry (11%) and agriculture (5.1%). With this structure, the GDP per capita of Araçuaàis R$ 14.2 thousand, a value lower than the state average (R$ 40.1 thousand) and the region of Teófilo Otoni (R$ 14.9 thousand), but higher than the average of the municipalities in the region of Araçuaà(R$ 11.4 thousand).
In the city, the AraçuaàMuseum was created to house the collection of objects and documents that record the religiosity, customs and activities that make up the history of Araçuaàand the region. The museum was created by the artist Lira Marques and Frei Chico, a Dutch Franciscan friar who worked as a researcher of Brazilian popular culture and religiosity. Every year, in September, the city holds the Micareta de AraçuaÃÂ, an off-season carnival that attracts many people from the region.