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Category: THE HERITAGE (9)

103. THE ROMAN MOSAICS OF MILREU

am.ma.en 03/12/2008 @ 16:25

Milreu ruins (a Portuguese National Monument located close to Faro - Algarve) consist of a roman house with peristyle, baths, temple and other buildings. According to different authors the main house dates back to the 2nd or the 4th century. The site displays an interesting and original mosaics collection, specially because of the marine fauna scenes.

Milreu mosaics of the villa's peristyle - Faro, Portugal

Mosaics of the villa's peristyle.

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Milreu mosaics of the temple's podium - Faro, Portugal

Mosaics of the temple's podium.

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More details about these (and other) roman mosaics: Roman Mosaics in the Southwest of Hispania - Andaluzia and Algarve.

[Portuguese post on Apr 16th, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Comment by PEJA - 2008-12-05 - 22:42:55
Oooh! You must come in Ladispoli (where i live)! You must see etruscan mosaic from Girpy (ancient commercial city...)

Comment by AM.MA - 2008-12-07 - 02:48:36
Yes, I'd like that, it sounds great!

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Feb. 2009: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(88) THE CONVENT OF NOSSA SENHORA DO ESPINHEIRO

am.ma.en 03/07/2008 @ 23:00

These images stand as historical references, since the Convent of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro (Our Lady of the Thorn) has recently (in the beginnings of our century) been recovered and turned into a luxury hotel, in the outskirts of Évora - Portugal.

Remarkable building founded in the 15th century and invaluable pantheon of the Alentejo's nobility, it was begun in the year of 1458, integrated in the order of St. Jerome [...].
Translated from Túlio Espanca, Évora - Arte e História (Évora - Art and History). 1980.

Convent of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro - Évora, Portugal

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The complex of the former convent includes two National Monuments - the Church of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro and the Chapel tomb of Garcia de Resende.

Entrance to the Church, Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro - Évora, PortugalChapel tomb of Garcia de Resende - Évora, Portugal

On the left, the main entrance to the church - behind the iron gate, the marble classic portal, on the axis, from 1566, above which stand the images of the Virgin of the Thorn, S. Jerome and St. John Baptist.
Idem, ibidem.

On the right, the Chapel tomb - The funeral monument, typical example of Manueline-mudejar art, consists of three separate bodies: porch, nave and chancel, in a rectangular miniaturized plan.
Idem, ibidem.

NOTE: According to Wikipedia - In modern usage, «convent» almost invariably refers to a community of women, as opposed to the «monastery», for men; but in historical usage they are often interchangeable.
The Convent of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro was actually for monks. See also SANTA MARIA DE CELAS MONASTERY, which was for nuns.

[Portuguese post on Mar 31st, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(87) THE CLOISTER OF NOSSA SENHORA DO ESPINHEIRO

am.ma.en 30/06/2008 @ 13:13

BEFORE THE CONVENT TURNED INTO A LUXURY HOTEL, its cloister had Magnolias (Magnolia grandiflora - I think that there were two of them). Lush and admirable trees, that probably had been there for centuries.

The cloister of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro - Évora, Portugal

The cloister of Nossa Senhora do Espinheiro - Évora, Portugal

Surroundings of Évora - Portugal.

In the extinct convent, the Gothic-Manueline cloister is to be noticed, with four corridors and two granite buttressed floors, marble columns with naturalist capitals, twin arcades, rib vaults and royal locks, armillary spheres and crosses of Christ. It was built by masters of stonemasonry João Álvares and Álvaro Anes (1520-22).
Translated from Túlio Espanca, Évora - Arte e História (Art and History). 1980.

NOTE: See also THE CONVENT OF NOSSA SENHORA DO ESPINHEIRO and the cloister of SANTA MARIA DE CELAS MONASTERY.

[Portuguese post on Mar 30th, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(60) THE TILE (AZULEJO) IN PORTUGAL

am.ma.en 21/04/2008 @ 10:43

(Azulejo - from the arabian al Zulaicj, that later became aljulej - small flat and polished stone).

The use of ceramic tiles in Portuguese architecture dates back to the 15th and 16th centuries, after the moorish presence and influence on the Iberian Peninsula.

Façade with tiles, private house - Sintra, Portugal

Façade of a private house - Sintra, Portugal.

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An important characteristic of the repetition patterns is the way in which the compositions are organized, always showing (with more or less subtlety) diagonals opposing to vertical and horizontal lines, main elements in architecture.
Rafael Salinas Calado, 5 Séculos do Azulejo em Portugal - 5 Centuries of the Tile in Portugal, 1985.

Detail of the tiles on a private house façade - Sintra, Portugal

Detail of the tiles on a private house façade - Sintra, Portugal

The tile is essencially an element that brightens the surface, reflecting light, heat and sound. [...]
It cannot - mostly - be appreciated peace by peace, because it is conceived to be seen as a whole definitely integrated in the architecture [...].

(idem, ibidem).

NOTE: Visit the National Tile Museum, Museu Nacional do Azulejo web site.

[Portuguese post on Mar 1st, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(54) SANTA MARIA DE CELAS MONASTERY

am.ma.en 29/03/2008 @ 11:46

The cloister of Santa Maria de Celas Monastery - Coimbra, Portugal

Colomn detail, Santa Maria de Celas' cloister - Coimbra, Portugal

The cloister of Santa Maria de Celas Monastery - Coimbra, Portugal

Some aspects of Santa Maria de Celas' cloister - Coimbra, Portugal.

A Cistercian feminin Monastery from 1210 and a National Monument (Monumento Nacional) decreed on June 6th 1910 (by that time Portugal was a Monarchy!). It is still nowadays one of the most important examples of Portuguese Medieval Art and Architecture.

NOTE: See also THE CLOISTER OF NOSSA SENHORA DO ESPINHEIRO and THE CONVENT OF NOSSA SENHORA DO ESPINHEIRO.

[Portuguese post on Feb 21st, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(35) THE «OLD BRIDGE» OF SILVES, Algarve

am.ma.en 26/02/2008 @ 00:58

Its origin has remained uncertain (Roman? Medieval?) till nowadays. The bridge crosses the Arade River with five arches (may be there were six of them originally) and is built from stone fitted masonry - the typical reddish Silves' sandstone. The piers are protected by cutwaters (pointed elements on the pier-bases, to break the wave chock and to ease the water flow) that enhance the bridge's image of stability and robustness.

The «Old Bridge» of Silves - Algarve, Portugal

The two Plane trees (Platanus sp, Platanaceae family) on the left side of the picture are actually on the right riverside - a good example of how trees can help defining a landscape.

[Portuguese post on Feb 2nd, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Image down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(19) WORLD HERITAGE

am.ma.en 19/02/2008 @ 10:54

- in the Historical Centre of Toledo - Castilla-La Mancha, Spain.

Private passage across a street - Toledo, Spain

The idea of creating an international movement for protecting heritage emerged after World War I. [...] The event that aroused particular international concern was the decision to build the Aswan High Dam in Egypt, which would have flooded the valley containing the Abu Simbel temples, a treasure of ancient Egyptian civilization. [...] Consequently, UNESCO initiated, with the help of the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS), the preparation of a draft convention on the protection of cultural heritage. [...]
The Convention concerning the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage was adopted by the General Conference of UNESCO on 16 November 1972.

(From the UNESCO World Heritage Website - The World Heritage Convention/Brief History).

[Portuguese post on Jan 20th, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Image down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.

(07) THE FRIGATE «D. FERNANDO II E GLÓRIA»

am.ma.en 17/02/2008 @ 00:56

[The original portuguese post starts with an excerpt from a Fernando Pessoa's poem].

The Frigate D. Fernando II e Glória - Lisbon, Portugal

The Frigate D. Fernando II e Glória and the 25 de Abril Bridge - Lisbon, Portugal

A Portuguese Navy effective vessel since April 1998 (after complete restoration for the Lisbon Expo'98), the Frigate is considered the World eighth oldest war ship and belongs to the Navy Museum (Museu de Marinha) in Lisbon.
These pictures were taken when it was docked at Alcântara on the Tagus River - Lisbon, Portugal - before its masts were locked down, for... security? protection? ... reasons.
Nowadays, and since December 2007, the frigate is docked at Cacilhas, Almada - also on the Tagus River - to be restored and equipped/prepared to become a floating museum.

LET'S APPLAUD THE ALMADA MUNICIPALITY (Câmara Municipal de Almada)!

[Portuguese post on Jan 5th, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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(02) THIS PIECE OF SCULPTURE...

am.ma.en 16/02/2008 @ 12:00

Stolen sculpture from Estói Palace Gardens - Faro, Portugal

... HAS BEEN STOLEN FROM HERE:

Broken ceramic tiles in Estói Palace Gardens - Faro, Portugal

Images in the gardens of the Estói Palace, nearby Faro - Algarve, Portugal.

The palace is from the eighteenth century, with later alterations. Historical Heritage defined as Public Interest Building under the law (Decreto nº 129/77), on September 27th 1977. This definition includes palace, gardens, fountains and statues.

Other statues and pieces of ceramic tiles (Azulejos) have recently been broken and taken away... Does anybody know where they are? Where they went to?
Please contact the national or local authorities!

[Portuguese post on Jan 3rd, 2008]

Category: THE HERITAGE

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Dec. 2008: Images down to 20% of ORIGINAL SIZE (click to see). Comments closed.