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Alentejo Travel Information
On the vast
golden plains of Alentejo, the peaceful landscape is but a curtain
that opens on to an unimaginable heritage.
One is first
taken by surprise by the remarkable traces of successive cultures:
dolmens and cromlechs, Roman and Arab vestiges mingling with the
most recent signs of Christianity, of which the numerous medieval
castles that stand out in the vast plain are but one example.
To the northeast
are the beautiful villages and towns which make up the so-called
Rota dos Castelos (Castle Route): Nisa, Castelo de Vide, Marvão,
Portalegre and Alter do Chão. Further south, the landscape becomes
warmer and flatter; around Évora (one of the most beautiful towns in
Portugal), are Monsaraz, Vila Viçosa, Estremoz, and Arraiolos
(renowned for its hand made tapestries, based on traditional
drawings from the 17th and 18th centuries). Driving on to the south,
the vast plains become less inhabited and sunnier, the only shade
being provide by olive trees and oak trees, and the only amenity
being provided by refreshing dams. A trip to Alvito, Beja (where one
can stay in historic pousadas), Serpa and Mértola will be worth your
time. The coastline to the west offers the visitor magnificent
Atlantic beaches.
As the region
with the highest thermal amplitude (going down to 5°C or up to
33°C), Alentejo is a dispersely populated region with quite open
horizons, where the rhythm of life follows the idle sound of
regional songs.
Beja:
Ancient Roman
town, it was a Muslim cultural centre later on. In the Queen Leonor
Museum are valuable archeologic finds. Other legacies: churches of
Santo António (Visigothic) and Santa Maria; convent and castle of
São Francisco (currently a pousada); chapel of Santo André
(Gothic-Moorish), and Misericórdia Church (Renaissance). Roman ruins
at Pisões. Castelo de Vide:
Thermal spa,
with medieval castle and Jewish quarter (15th century synagogue). A
special reference to the chapel of São Salvador do Mundo
(Visigothic) the two Paços do Concelho (medieval and 18th century),
and an ancient church. Elvas:
Fortress town,
with Roman-Arab castle, Amoreiras Aqueduct (15th-17th centuries).
Other places of interest: mother-church (Manueline), churches of
Nossa Senhora da Consolação (Renaissance) and Santa Clara (17th
century), and Archeology and Ethnography Museum. Estremoz:
Town crowned by
a 13th-century castle, with a citadel (currently a pousada) and
Santa Isabel Chapel (18th-century). special reference to the Gothic
Dom Dinis Palace, São Francisco Church and Convent
(Romanesque-Gothic), Paços do Concelho (14th-century), Maltesas
Convent (16th-century), and the Municipal Museum. Museum town of
Roman origins, with historic centre classified in UNESCO’s
International Heritage list. The ex-libris is its Roman temple,
located close to the Cathedral, which houses an important Sacred Art
Museum (Roman-Gothic). Among its many convents and churches, the
following can be visited: São Brás Chapel (Gothic-Moorish); São
Francisco Church (with its Capela dos Ossos, a chapel walled with
human bones) and São João Baptista Church (Gothic-Manueline);
churches of Nossa Senhora da Graça (with-convent), Santo Antão and
São Vicente (Mannerist). Palaces: Archepiscopal, Dom Manuel and
Dukes of Cadaval. A special reference also to: Praça de Giraldo,
with 16th-century arches; Aqueduct; convents of Santa Clara, Santa
Helena do Calvário and Lóios (this one currently a pousada);
University; ancient Jewish quarter; Évora Museum. To the south of
Castelo de Vide lies the town of Marvão, which is notable for its
impressive castle (13th-14th-centuries) and the wonderful views this
affords. Once outside the city walls, visit the convent of Nossa
senhora da Estrela (15th-century), with-ceramic tiles dating from
the 18th-century. Here too is the crucifix of Estrela, from the
Manueline period. Mértola:
This tower sits
over the right bank of the Guardiana river. The town’s main
attraction is its castle, built by the Moors, with a guard tower
from the 13th-century. The main church, with its sculpted façade,
contains elements from the Manueline period, occupies the site of
what once was an ancient mosque. Mértola has three important museum
sites as a consequence of the intense archeological activity there.
The Roman museum occupies the Town Hall building. The Islamic
collection includes the country’s most important archive of ceramic
objects (9th to 13th-centuries). Here too is one of the rarest early
Christian basilicas in the entire Iberian peninsula (dating from the
5th-century). Monsaraz:
Beautiful
medieval village, with castle, walls and fortifications. Special
reference to the Santa Catarina Chapel, mother-church, Paços do
Concelho, Paços de Audiência and Porta da Vila. In the nearby
village of Reguengos there is a megalithic nucleus, with over 100
dolmens and cromlechs. Portalegre:
Amongst the
towers and walls of the medieval castle stand the Paços do Concelho
and Hospital da Misericórdia. Worthwhile visiting: the Cathedral,
São Bernardo Convent, the church of São Francisco Monastery
(13th-18th centuries), and the Regional, Sacred Art, Municipal
Library and Casa de José Régio Museums. Santiago do Cacém:
This is a
village lying to the south of Setúbal. Its majestic castle of Arab
origin was completely rebuilt by the Christians in the
12Ith-century. Beside the castle is the São Pedro Chapel, which
dates from the 7th-century, while the main church dates from the
8th-century. Near Santiago do Cacém one should visit the
archeological site of Miróbriga, which was an important urban centre
in Roman times. The site contains a hippodrome, houses decorated
with mural paintings, an acropolis, a forum and a very rich bathing
complex, which is one of the best preserved in the country.
Tróia:
Set on a
peninsula overlooking the south bank of river Sado, Tróia has a
number of important Roman remains, especially of an important
industrial complex used for salting fish, an activity in this region
in Roman times. The peninsula is fringed by many beautiful sandy
beaches that also back onto a challenging golf course.
Vila Viçosa:
The Duke’s
palace belongs to the House of Bragança, the last Portuguese
dinasty. It is an imposing building, with a Renaissance façade and a
museum-library. Other places of interest: Castle (13th-14th
centuries, with Santa Maria Church); Santo Agostinho Church
(13th-18th centuries); Chagas de Cristo Convent; Nossa Senhora da
Esperança Monastery; Castelo Novo (Renaissance). Alcáçovas,
Aljustrel, Alter do Chão, Alvito (pousada), Arraiolos (hand made
rugs), Avis, Borba, Campo Maior, Crato, Escoural (archeological
park), Evoramonte, Flor da Rosa and Marvão (pousadas), Mértola,
Monforte, Montemor-o-Novo, Moura, Nisa, Ourique, Redondo, Serpa
(pousada), Viana do Alentejo, Vila Nova de Milfontes.
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