
Torre de Belém - en
Versão portuguesa aqui. GPS 38.691652189603964, -9.215969383207815Built on the northern bank of the Tagus between 1514 and 1520 as part of the Tagus estuary defence system, the Tower of Belém is one of the architectural jewels of the reign of Manuel I. In the tower as a whole one can distinguish two distinct volumes and military architectural models: the mediaeval keep tower and the modern bulwark which, as it contained two artillery levels, allowed for long-distance cannon firing as well as ...

CR7 2023 Edition
Versão portuguesa aqui.Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro born 5 February 1985 is a Portuguese professional football player who plays as a forward for and captains both Saudi Professional League club Al Nassr and the Portugal national team. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, Ronaldo has won five Ballon d'Or awards and four European Golden Shoes, the most by a European player. He has won 32 trophies in his career, including seven league titles, five UEFA Champion...

Mosteiro dos Jerónimos - en
Versão portuguesa aqui. GPS 38.698112850075525, -9.206629905588464The Monastery of Santa Maria de Belém, better known as Mosteiro dos Jerónimos, is a Portuguese monastery, built at the end of the 15th century by King D. Manuel I and was entrusted to the Order of São Jerónimo. It is located in the parish of Belém, in the city and municipality of Lisbon. It has, since 2016, the status of National Pantheon. The culmination of Manueline architecture, this monastery is the most notable Portuguese ...
«There is, in the most western part of Iberia, a very strange people: they neither govern nor allow themselves to be governed!»

Torre de Belém - en
Versão portuguesa aqui. GPS 38.691652189603964, -9.215969383207815Built on the northern bank of the Tagus between 1514 and 1520 as part of the Tagus estuary defence system, the Tower of Belém is one of the architectural jewels of the reign of Manuel I. In the tower as a whole one can distinguish two distinct volumes and military architectural models: the mediaeval keep tower and the modern bulwark which, as it contained two artillery levels, allowed for long-distance cannon firing as well as ...

CR7 2023 Edition
Versão portuguesa aqui.Cristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro born 5 February 1985 is a Portuguese professional football player who plays as a forward for and captains both Saudi Professional League club Al Nassr and the Portugal national team. Widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time, Ronaldo has won five Ballon d'Or awards and four European Golden Shoes, the most by a European player. He has won 32 trophies in his career, including seven league titles, five UEFA Champion...

Mosteiro dos Jerónimos - en
Versão portuguesa aqui. GPS 38.698112850075525, -9.206629905588464The Monastery of Santa Maria de Belém, better known as Mosteiro dos Jerónimos, is a Portuguese monastery, built at the end of the 15th century by King D. Manuel I and was entrusted to the Order of São Jerónimo. It is located in the parish of Belém, in the city and municipality of Lisbon. It has, since 2016, the status of National Pantheon. The culmination of Manueline architecture, this monastery is the most notable Portuguese ...
«There is, in the most western part of Iberia, a very strange people: they neither govern nor allow themselves to be governed!»

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Versão portuguesa aqui.
GPS 38.69761253357945, -9.282684233990768
The Fort of Nossa Senhora de Porto Salvo, also referred to as Fort Giribita and Fort Ponta do Guincho, is located on the right bank of the Tagus Estuary, in the village of Oeiras, on a rocky point. It belongs to the parish of Oeiras and S. Julião da Barra, Paço da Arcos and Caxias, on the Lisbon Coast.

History
Background
It dates back to the so-called Battery of Guincho, later called Battery of Our Lady of Porto Salvo.
The Restoration War to the 18th century
In the context of the War of Restoration of Portuguese independence, it was rebuilt on the initiative of D. António Luís de Menezes (1596-1675), 3rd Count of Cantanhede, with its works completed in 1649, according to the epigraphic inscription on the Arms Gate , which reads:
"REINANDO EL REI OUSSO SNOR / DOM IOAO 4 THIS WORK WAS MADE / BY MANDATORY OF THE COUNT D CAN / TANHEDE DOS SEVS CONSOS DO ESTA / DO E GVERRA VEEDOR DE SVA / FZDA IN THE YEAR OF / 1649" It was set up with four pieces. At the end of the 17th century, its garrison was under the command of Corporal Inácio Gomes (1695).
In the 18th century, reports show that it was equipped with two pieces of caliber 24, keeping five more incapable of service (1735). Still commanded by Corporal Inácio Gomes, he was promoted to Infantry Captain (1740), passing command of the fort to Corporal Estevão José de Brito (1741). From 1763, command passed to the sergeant-major of the Royal Navy Regiment, José António de Andrade, when he was armed with seven pieces of 18-gauge iron. Estevão José de Brito resumed command from 1765. At the end of the century, command was handed over to the lieutenant of the Évora Cavalry Regiment, João Pinto Ribeiro de Vasconcelos e Sousa (1798).
From the 19th century to our days

At the beginning of the 19th century, Lieutenant João Francisco da Cruz Alagoa was in command (1804), and his artillery was reduced to just two pieces (1824). In the context of the Liberal Wars, it was manned by twenty-two artillerymen, in addition to a corporal, a junior officer and a non-commissioned officer in command of twenty-two infantry soldiers. Its artillery now amounted to seven pieces (1832).
Under the command of the retired lieutenant D. José António Lócio (1873), restoration work began on its premises, in the amount of 273$000 reis (1874). From 1877 onwards, its premises were handed over to the Defense Commission of Lisbon and its Port, which used them as a deposit of torpedo material, a function it still carried out in the first year of the Republic, when it underwent general improvement works (1911).
At the time of the Second World War, with Portugal remaining neutral in the conflict, it was handed over to the Ministry of Finance, which ceded it to the Autonomous Board of Roads, to be restored as part of the landscaping of the seafront on the occasion of the opening of Av. Marginal (1942). The following year, the Portuguese Legion requested that the property be transferred to it for the installation of a pavilion for sailing regattas.
At the outbreak of the Carnation Revolution (1974), the fort's facilities were occupied and, in the following year, transferred to the Directorate of Naval Infrastructure of the Portuguese Navy.
Characteristics
It is a small maritime fort, in the Baroque style, designed to reinforce the defense of the mouth of the Tagus river, supporting the defense provided by the Fort of São Julião da Barra. It features an organic irregular pentagonal plan (adapted to the terrain), at different levels.
The plaster structure features corners highlighted in stone masonry. At the center of the north wall opens the Monumental Gate in straight lintel, also with a stonework frame, surmounted by an epigraphic stone plaque where the date of foundation (1649) and the royal coat of arms are inscribed. Two circular watchtowers topped by domes are articulated by a wall.
On the embankment, there is a service building with four compartments, each served by a chest window with a straight lintel, and six embrasures are opened in the walls on the sea side.
Gallery




Versão portuguesa aqui.
GPS 38.69761253357945, -9.282684233990768
The Fort of Nossa Senhora de Porto Salvo, also referred to as Fort Giribita and Fort Ponta do Guincho, is located on the right bank of the Tagus Estuary, in the village of Oeiras, on a rocky point. It belongs to the parish of Oeiras and S. Julião da Barra, Paço da Arcos and Caxias, on the Lisbon Coast.

History
Background
It dates back to the so-called Battery of Guincho, later called Battery of Our Lady of Porto Salvo.
The Restoration War to the 18th century
In the context of the War of Restoration of Portuguese independence, it was rebuilt on the initiative of D. António Luís de Menezes (1596-1675), 3rd Count of Cantanhede, with its works completed in 1649, according to the epigraphic inscription on the Arms Gate , which reads:
"REINANDO EL REI OUSSO SNOR / DOM IOAO 4 THIS WORK WAS MADE / BY MANDATORY OF THE COUNT D CAN / TANHEDE DOS SEVS CONSOS DO ESTA / DO E GVERRA VEEDOR DE SVA / FZDA IN THE YEAR OF / 1649" It was set up with four pieces. At the end of the 17th century, its garrison was under the command of Corporal Inácio Gomes (1695).
In the 18th century, reports show that it was equipped with two pieces of caliber 24, keeping five more incapable of service (1735). Still commanded by Corporal Inácio Gomes, he was promoted to Infantry Captain (1740), passing command of the fort to Corporal Estevão José de Brito (1741). From 1763, command passed to the sergeant-major of the Royal Navy Regiment, José António de Andrade, when he was armed with seven pieces of 18-gauge iron. Estevão José de Brito resumed command from 1765. At the end of the century, command was handed over to the lieutenant of the Évora Cavalry Regiment, João Pinto Ribeiro de Vasconcelos e Sousa (1798).
From the 19th century to our days

At the beginning of the 19th century, Lieutenant João Francisco da Cruz Alagoa was in command (1804), and his artillery was reduced to just two pieces (1824). In the context of the Liberal Wars, it was manned by twenty-two artillerymen, in addition to a corporal, a junior officer and a non-commissioned officer in command of twenty-two infantry soldiers. Its artillery now amounted to seven pieces (1832).
Under the command of the retired lieutenant D. José António Lócio (1873), restoration work began on its premises, in the amount of 273$000 reis (1874). From 1877 onwards, its premises were handed over to the Defense Commission of Lisbon and its Port, which used them as a deposit of torpedo material, a function it still carried out in the first year of the Republic, when it underwent general improvement works (1911).
At the time of the Second World War, with Portugal remaining neutral in the conflict, it was handed over to the Ministry of Finance, which ceded it to the Autonomous Board of Roads, to be restored as part of the landscaping of the seafront on the occasion of the opening of Av. Marginal (1942). The following year, the Portuguese Legion requested that the property be transferred to it for the installation of a pavilion for sailing regattas.
At the outbreak of the Carnation Revolution (1974), the fort's facilities were occupied and, in the following year, transferred to the Directorate of Naval Infrastructure of the Portuguese Navy.
Characteristics
It is a small maritime fort, in the Baroque style, designed to reinforce the defense of the mouth of the Tagus river, supporting the defense provided by the Fort of São Julião da Barra. It features an organic irregular pentagonal plan (adapted to the terrain), at different levels.
The plaster structure features corners highlighted in stone masonry. At the center of the north wall opens the Monumental Gate in straight lintel, also with a stonework frame, surmounted by an epigraphic stone plaque where the date of foundation (1649) and the royal coat of arms are inscribed. Two circular watchtowers topped by domes are articulated by a wall.
On the embankment, there is a service building with four compartments, each served by a chest window with a straight lintel, and six embrasures are opened in the walls on the sea side.
Gallery




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