Castelo de Sao JorgeThe walls of Saint George's Castle, sitting atop a hill guarding the Tagus, date from the Moorish occupation in the 10th century, but the site has been a fortress for centuries, possibly from 500 AD. The castle is regarded as the cradle of Lisbon, and today it provides a panoramic view of the River Tagus and the Alfama medieval district, which is spread out below it. Visitors can walk the esplanades and climb the ramparts. A multimedia show is available during the day which brings alive the history of Lisbon. The castle grounds are planted with olive, pine
and cork trees and provide a pleasant spot to relax.
Phone Number: 218 800 620
Email Address: castelodesaojorge@egeac.pt
Website: www.castelosaojorge.egeac.pt
Transport: Bus 37 or tram 12 or 38
Hours: Daily 9am to 9pm (November to March) and 9am to 9pm (March to November)
Admission: EUR5, concessions available
AlfamaThe oldest part of Lisbon, the Alfama quarter sprawls down the hillside from below the Castelo de Sao Jorge, retaining much of the traditional color and atmosphere from the days when it was the ancient seat of the Saracens. Along the narrow cobblestone alleyways are taverns and street markets, interspersed with close-packed houses still occupied by stevedores, fishmongers and sailors. At the edge of the Alfama, Lisbon's renowned flea market, the Feira da Ladra, is held in the Campo de Santa Clara every Tuesday and Saturday. The Alfama is also full of historic buildings and churches, which are well worth exploring. Some of the buildings display fading coats of arms, which bear testimony to the fact that the Alfama was once home to aristocrats. At night the Alfama takes on a more mysterious aspect with street lanterns throwing shadows on the medieval walls, and it is advisable to avoid the area after dark in favor of the Bairro Alto café and nightclub district.
Sé (Cathedral)Although this cathedral in Largo da Se in the Alfama district is not outwardly appealing, it was the first church in Lisbon, built on the site of a Saracen mosque after the city was captured by the Crusaders in the 12th century. Inside, this ancient church features some treasures, like the font where St Anthony of Padua was baptized in 1195, and numerous notable relics, images and icons.
Phone Number: 21 886 6752
Transport: Tram 28
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday 9am to 7pm, Sunday and Monday 9am to 5pm
Admission: Free
Calouste Gulbenkian MuseumGulbenkian was an Armenian oil magnate who died in 1955 having put together one of the world's finest private art collections. The collection is now housed in a modern center where the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation sponsors a host of cultural and performing arts projects, and has a rotating exhibition of works by Portuguese and foreign artists. The Gulbenkian collection itself covers Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities, Islamic ceramics and textiles, Syrian treasures, Chinese ceramics, Japanese prints and lacquerware and European medieval illuminated manuscripts. The collection is so vast and varied as to be breathtaking. Among the paintings are two Rembrandts, a Rubens and a Renoir.
Address: Avenue de Berna 45A
Phone Number: 21 782 3000
Website: www.museu.gulbenkian.pt
Transport: Bus 16, 726, 56, 718, 742 or metro to S. Sebastião or Praça de Espanha stations
Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 5.45pm
Admission: EUR5; concessions available. Free on Sundays
The Bairro AltoThe Bairro Alto district (literally the Upper City) is, like the Alfama, an historic enclave dating from 1513, which is reached in a novel way via the Santa Justa Elevator (a structure reminiscent of the Eiffel tower in Paris) from the lower city. The colorful district resounds to the calls of vendors and fishmongers, and the windows and balconies are festooned with laundry and bird cages. At night the area comes alive with some of the finest fado cafes in the city, along streets lit by Victorian lanterns. Fado is the famous brand of music and dance brought to Portugal by African slaves in the 19th century, characterized by songs of sadness and despair, and there is no better place in Portugal to experience this musical genre than in the Bairro Alto of Lisbon.
Monument to the DiscoveriesOne of the most famous sights in Lisbon is the imposing monument, situated on the riverbank in the Avenida de Brasilia in the district of Belem, designed to commemorate the Portuguese Age of Discovery. Belem, where the Tagus meets the sea, is the point from which the maritime explorers of yore set forth in their sailing ships to discover the world. The monument was unveiled in 1960 on the 500th anniversary of the death of Prince Henry the Navigator in 1460, the monarch who was largely responsible for Portugal's role in world exploration during the 15th and 16th centuries. The massive monument takes the form of a caravel with Prince Henry at the prow, backed by images of renowned mariners, royal patrons and others who participated in the golden age of discovery.
Phone Number: 21 303 1950
Transport: Bus 27, 28, 43 or 49
Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 9.30am to 5pm (September to June), 9.30am to 9pm (July and August)
Tower of BelemThe famous Tower of Belem is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and is one of Lisbon's most photographed landmarks because of the decoration on its exterior. The outer walls are adorned with a stone-carved rope and beautiful openwork balconies, along with Moorish watchtowers and battlements shaped like shields. The tower was built in the 16th century to serve as a fortress in the middle of the River Tagus.
Address: Avenida de Brasilia
Phone Number: 21 362 0034
Website: www.mosteirojeronimos.pt/english/index_torre.html
Transport: Bus 27, 28, 29, 43, 49 or 51; tram 15
Hours: Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 5pm (October to April), 10am to 6.30pm (May to September)
Admission: EUR4 (adults) and EUR1.60 (youths). Concessions available
Parque das NacoesLisbon's exhibition park was upgraded and renamed for the Expo '98 world exposition, which revitalized the city and brought international tourists and interest flooding in. The site is now worthy of a full day's sightseeing, featuring several attractions, not least of which is the Lisbon Oceanarium with its 15,000 living examples of marine life. The main tank holds enough water to fill four Olympic-sized swimming pools, and is viewed from two floors through curved glass panels that provide a 180-degree view. Another popular diversion is the Virtual Reality Pavilion, which showcases the Portuguese age of discovery. Other attractions include a science center, cable car, the Vasco da Gama Tower and numerous bars and restaurants offering Portuguese cuisine.
Address: Avenue D. João II, Lote
Phone Number: 21 891 9333 or 21 891 9898
Email Address: info@parquedasnacoes.pt
Website: www.parquedasnacoes.pt
Transport: Buses, trains and the metro go to Oriente Station
Hours: Oceanarium: daily 10am to 8pm (until 7pm in winter)
Admission: Oceanarium: EUR10.50 (adults), EUR5.25 (children 4-12)
FatimaIn 1917 the Virgin Mary allegedly appeared above an oak tree and spoke to three peasant children in the valley of Cova da Iria, 88 miles (142km) north of Lisbon. The children claimed to have seen the apparition on five different occasions, and the spot has now become one of the great pilgrimage shrines of the world, known as Fatima. Between May and October the 13th day of every month is pilgrimage day, when hundreds of the faithful gather in a square twice the size of St Peter's in Rome before the Chapel of the Apparitions. The original oak tree is gone, but has been replaced by a simple white column inside a basilica, which is flanked by statues of the saints.
SetubalA popular touring destination 25 miles (40km) south of Lisbon is Setubal, one of Portugal's oldest cities, renowned for producing the most delicious muscadel wine in the world. The city is also the center of Portugal's sardine industry, and has been a fish-salting center since the 1st century. White mounds of sea salt drying in the sun are a familiar part of the local landscape. There are some outstanding beaches near the city and some pretty countryside dotted with orange groves, orchards and vineyards.
Phone Number: 265 539 120 (Setubal Tourist Office)
Oceanario de Lisboa (Lisbon Oceanarium)Marketed as the second best aquarium in the world, the world-class Lisbon Oceanarium is the most impressive achievement of EXPO '98, which used to be an abandoned waterfront. The centerpiece of the stone and glass building is the 1.3-million gallon (5-million liter) holding tank and the Oceanarium consists of four distinct ecosystems that replicate the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and Antarctic oceans, each featuring the aboveground birds, amphibians, and reptiles associated with those waters. Otters splash and dive in the warmer Pacific waters, while penguins shuffle around in their tuxedos in the Antarctic section. This attraction is one that the Portuguese nation is proud of and is an absolute must-see for the whole family.
Address: Esplanada d. Carlos I
Phone Number: 21 891 7002
Website: www.oceanario.pt
Hours: Open from 10am to 8pm (summer) and daily 10am to 7pm (winter)
Admission: Adults EUR11; Students and children EUR5.50; Concessions available
Museu de Marinha (Maritime Museum)With such maritime icons as Vasco de Gama and Bartolomeu Dias, its no wonder that Portugal's Maritime Museum is one of the best in Europe, evoking a sense of what it was like when the victorious Portuguese dominated the high seas. Visitors can marvel at the hundreds of models of 15th- to 19th-century sailing ships, merchant marine vessels, fishing boats and pleasure boats as well as a full range of Portuguese naval uniforms, including one worn at a Mozambique military outpost in 1896.
Address: Praça do Império
Phone Number: 21 362 0019
Hours: Tuesday - Sunday from 10am-6pm (April to September); Tuesday - Sunday 10am-5pm (October to March); Closed Mondays and Holidays
Admission: Adults EUR3; Chilren EUR1.50; Concessions available
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Word Travels is a comprehensive travel guide covering hundreds of cities and holiday resorts in more than 125 countries.
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