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Igreja Matriz de Santiago / Igreja de Santiago
- heritage
Rua Nova da Igreja
5110, Santiago
Mannerist parish church. Presents longitudinal plant composed of ship alpendrada and chancel and vestry and belfry adossados to side front left and right, respectively. The altarpieces are carved polychrome, which extend through the triumphal arch, the national Baroque style. The building also features vestments in masonry, except the chancel and the main façade. The interior shows intense painting on wood decor and talha and the toppings in caissons are hagiographic theme and scenes from the life of Christ.
Igreja Matriz de São Pedro
- heritage
Largo de São Pedro, 60
8000-145, Faro
Built in the 16th century in the place of a hermitage where the sailors went to pray, it was deeply modified after the earthquake of 1755. The main chapel is decorated with a panel of the end of the 17th century, which belongs to the experimental baroque epoch. A stone image of Nossa Senhora da Esperança and yet another image of Santa Ana, credited to the sculptor Machade de Castro, ar part of this church's assets, that also includes paintings and images from several convents.
Igreja Nossa Senhora da Atalaia
- heritage
Rua Antonio Joaquim Marques
2870, Atalaia
A Mannerist building, rebuilt in the 18th century. The interior walls are covered in 17th-century blue and white tiles depicting scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary. At the back of the church is a eucalyptus grove that ends in a fountain, the Fonte da Senhora or Fonte Santa, where, according to legend, Our Lady of Atalaia appeared. The traditional symbolic "Lavagens" are still held there today during the parish's main pilgrimage, which takes place on the last Sunday in August.
Igreja Matriz de Campo Maior
- heritage
Largo Doutor Regalla, 11-B
7370-027, Campo Maior
Built between 1570 and 1646, it has a tripartite main façade with embedded pilasters. The central part features a wide round arch forming a narthex, surmounted by three windows with three pediments. On the sides, two strong bell towers covered by domes are visible. Inside, with three naves, the silver liturgical objects and vestments woven and embroidered with gold from the 16th century stand out. It is also known as the Church of Our Lady of Expectation.
Mamoa da Senhora da Livração
- heritage
Paio Afonso
5470-384, Pondras
About 30 metres from the main estradão and along the access path that connects to the chapel of Senhora da Livração, a tea, is a megalithic burial monument whose tumuli is relatively high. Has at least 13 meters in diameter and about 1.5 meters high, is fairly revolved; features deep depression and identifies any central mainstay. Near this monument identifies what could be another, is fully covered with stones, which made it impossible to confirm.
Igreja de São Francisco
- heritage
Rua do Infante Dom Henrique
4050-297, Porto
Built between 1383 and 1410, it is a reference of the Gothic monumentality of the city, with an emphasis on the Romanesque portal with three arched gateways, the rosette symbolizing the Rosa Fortunae, the windows of the Manueline period and the three naves where the interior is divided, covered with gilded carving from the 17th and 18th centuries. It belonged to the Convent of the Observant Franciscans. The interior, of three naves, is highlighted by the 17th / 18th centuries carvings, frescoes and board in the main chapel, transept and sixteenth-century tombs.
Igreja de São João Evangelista das Carmelitas
- heritage
Praça do Marquês de Pombal
3810-133, Aveiro
The construction began in 1610 as the Paço de D. Brites Lara (Palace), and in 1657 the Ordem das Carmelitas feminine convent, space where the church is integrated, was built. By the end of the XVII century the pulpits were built and the dressing in golden woodcarving began. In the next century the referred woodcarving was combined with azulejos (glazed tiles) from the Vital Rifarto factory. Already at the XX century, the building suffered repair works, being classified as National Monument.
Palácio Nacional de Queluz
- heritage
Largo do Palácio Nacional de Queluz
2745-191, Queluz
This building originated from the desire of King Pedro V to transform the Quinta de Queluz into a palace. Construction began in 1747 under the direction of Mateus Vicente de Oliveira and later J. B. Robillon, who gave the palace its exquisite decoration. Inside the palace, the throne room, the music room, and the ambassadors' room are prominent features. Its gardens are adorned with statues, lakes, and fountains. The grand canal has walls covered in tiles.
Palácio de Eugénio Silva / Câmara Municipal de Santarém
- heritage
Largo do Município
2000-027, Santarém
The Santarém City Council currently occupies this beautiful palace, a remarkable example of sunny 17th-century civil architecture. The property was acquired in 1954 from the heirs of the capitalist Eugénio de Carvalho e Silva, after whom it is named. A building with classical lines, it has an elegant and sober façade, with balcony windows and characteristic 18th-century moldings. Inside, highlights include the "Noble Hall" and the "Hall of Virtues of the Councilors" with 18th-century tile panels.
Mosteiro de Grijó
- heritage
Alameda do Mosteiro Grijó
4415-998, Vila Nova de Gaia
The primitive monastery, called Monastery of São Salvador de Grijó, was founded in 922 in the place of Muraceses. It was only in the year 1112 that it was moved to its current location. In 1770 the convent was extinguished, passing its assets to the Convent of Mafra. Of note are the gilded carvings and the 18th century tiles in the chancel, as well as the pipe organ, from the end of the 18th century and beginning of the 19th century. Also noteworthy is the tomb of D. Rodrigo Sanches, classified as a National Monument.