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GuimarA?es
 

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Birthplace of Afonso Henriques and first capital of medieval Portucale, GUIMARA?ES remains a lively and atmospheric university town. The town's chief attraction is the Castelo (Tues-Sun 10am-12.30pm & 2-5.30pm; free), whose square keep and seven towers are an enduring symbol of the emergent Portuguese nation. Built by Henry of Burgundy, it became the stronghold of his son, Afonso Henriques. From here the Reconquest began along with the creation of a kingdom which, within a century of Afonso's death, was to stretch to its present borders. Afonso is said to have been born in the keep, and was probably baptized in the font of the Romanesque chapel of SA?o Miguel on the grassy slope below. The third building here, the PaA§o dos Duques , was once the palace of the dukes of BraganA§a, but under the Salazar dictatorship was "restored" as an official residence. Looking like a mock-Gothic Victorian folly, it now houses dull collections of portraits, furniture and porcelain.

The other two museums in GuimarA?es are, in contrast, among the best outside Lisbon. The Museu Alberto Sampaio , ten minutes' walk south of the castle (Tues-Sun 10am-12.30pm & 2-5.30pm, July & Aug till 7pm; a?¬1.50, free Sun am), is mostly the treasury of the adjoining Colegiada church and the monastery that used to be here. The highlight is a silver-gilt Triptych of the Nativity , said to have been found in the king of Castile's tent after the Portuguese victory at Aljubarrota. Like Batalha, the Colegiada itself was built in honour of a vow made by JoA?o I before that decisive battle. In front of it stands a Gothic canopy-shrine that marks the spot where Wamba, unwillingly elected king of the Visigoths, drove a pole into the ground swearing that he would not reign until it blossomed. Naturally it sprouted immediately. JoA?o, feeling this a useful precedent of divine favour, set out to meet the Castilians from this very point.

The finest church in town is SA?o Francisco , a short distance east of the tourist office, with its huge eighteenth-century azulejos , or decorative tiles, of St Francis preaching to the fishes and its elegant Renaissance cloister and fountain.


Other useful information for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):




Portugal,
Guimaraes