Everything about Beja Portugal totally explained
Beja is a city and a
municipality in
Portugal with a total area of 1,147.1
km² and a total population of 34,970 inhabitants in the municipality. The city proper has a population of 21,658.
The municipality is composed of 18 parishes, and is located in the district of
Beja. The present Mayor is Francisco Santos, elected by the
Unitarian Democratic Coalition. The municipal holiday is
Ascension Day. It also the capital of the
District of Beja.
History
Situated on a hill (277 m), commanding a strategic position over the vast plains of the Baixo
Alentejo, Beja was already an important place in the antiquity. Already inhabited in
Celtic times, the town was later named
Pax-Julia by
Julius Caesar in 48 BC when he made peace with the
Lusitanians. He raised the town to capital of the southernmost province of
Lusitania Santarém and Braga were the other capitals of the
conventi). During the reign of emperor
Augustus the thriving town became "Pax Augusta". It was already then a strategic road junction. When the
Visigoths took over the region, the town, then called Paca, became the seat of a
bishopry. Saint Aprígio (died in 530) became the first Visigothic
bishop of Paca. The town fell to the invading
Omayyad army in 713.
Starting in 910 there were successive attempts of conquest and reconquest by the Christian kings. With the collapse of the Umayyad
Caliphate of Córdoba in 1031, Beja became a
taifa, an independent Muslim-ruled principality. In 1144 the governor of Beja (
Arabic: باجة الزيت), Sidray ibn Wazir, helped the rebellion of the
Muridun (disciples) led by Abul-Qasim Ahmad ibn al-Husayn al-Quasi in the
Algarve against power of
Seville. In 1150 the town was captured by an army of the
Almohads, who annexed it to their North-African empire. It was retaken in 1162 by
Fernão Gonçalves, leading the army of the Portuguese king
Afonso I. In 1175 Beja was recaptured again by the Almohads. It stayed under Muslim rule till 1234 when king
Sancho II finally recaptured the town from the Moors.
All these wars depopulated the town and gradually reduced it into rubble. Only with D.
Manuel I in 1521 Beja reached again the status of city. It was attacked and occupied by the Portuguese and the Spanish armies during the
Portuguese Restoration War (1640-1667).
Beja became again the head of a bishopry in 1770, more than a thousand years after the fall of the Visigothic city. In 1808
Napoleonic troops under General
Junot sacked the city and massacred the inhabitants.
Castle
The castle on top of the hill can be seen from afar and dominates the town. It was built, together with the town walls, under the reign of king
Diniz in the 13th century over the remains of a Roman
castellum that had been fortified by the
Moors. It consists of
battlemented walls with four square corner towers and a central granite and marble
keep (
Torre de Menagem), with its height of 40 m the highest in Portugal. The top of the keep can be accessed via a spiral staircase with 197 steps, passing three
stellar-vaulted rooms with
Gothic windows. The
merlons of the
machicolation around the keep are topped with small pyramids. Standing on the battlements, one has a sensational panorama over the surrounding landscape. One can also glimpse the remains of the city walls that once had forty
turrets and five gates. The castle now houses a small military museum.
The square in front of the castle is named after Gonçalo Mendes da Maia or
o Lidador, a brave soldier killed in the battle against the Moors.
The whitewashed Latin-Visigothic church of Santo Amaro, dedicated to
Saint Amaro, standing next to the castle, is one of just four pre-Romanesque churches left in Portugal. Some parts date from the sixth century and the interior columns and
capitals are carved with foliages and geometric designs from the seventh century. Especially the column with birds attacking a snake is of particular note. It houses today a small archaeological museum with Visigothic art.
Museu da Rainha D. Leonor
This regional museum was set up in 1927 and 1928 in the former convent Our Lady of the Conception (
Convento de Nossa Senhora da Conceição) of the
Order of Poor Ladies (dissolved in 1834), gradually expanding its collection. This
Franciscan convent had been established in 1459 by
Infante Fernando, Duke of Viseu and duke of Beja, next to his ducal palace. The construction continued until 1509. It is an impressive building with a late-
Gothic lattice-worked
architrave running along the building. This elegant architrave resembles somewhat the architrave of the
Monastery of Batalha, even if there are some early-
Manueline influences. Above the entrance porch on the western façade one can see the
ajimez window (a
mullioned window in Manueline and Moorish style) in the room of the
abbess, originating from the demolished palace of the dukes of Beja. The entrance door is embedded under an
ogee arch. A square bell-tower and a
spire with
crockets tower above the complex. The convent has been classified as a national monument.
The entrance hall leads to the sumptuously gilded
Baroque chapel, consisting of a single nave under a semi-circular
vault. Three altars (one of the 17th century, dedicated to St. John the Evangelist, and two of the 18th century, dedicated to St. Christopher and St. Bento) are decorated with gilded woodwork (
talha dourada). The fourth altar, dedicated to St.
John the Baptist, was decorated with Florentine mosaics by
José Ramalho in 1695.
On the wall are three religious
azulejos dating from 1741, depicting scenes from the life of St. John the Baptist
The refectory and the
claustro are decorated with exquisite
azulejos, some dating from Moorish times, others from the 16th to the 18th centuries.
One enters the
chapter house through a Manueline portal from the
quadra of St. John the Evangelist. The ribbed vault of this square room was
distempered during the renovations of 1727. The walls are covered with Arab-Hispanic azulejos with geometric and vegetal designs that are among the most important ceramic decorations in Portugal. Above the azulejos are some semicircular distempered paintings with religious themes: St. John the Baptist, St. John the Evangelist, St. Christopher, St. Clare and St. Francis of Assisi.
The museum houses also an important collection of Flemish, Spanish and Portuguese paintings from the 15th to the 18th centuries, among them:
- Flemish paintings: "Virgin with Milk" (ca. 1530) and "Christ and His Apostles" (16th c.)
- Portuguese paintings: "Ecce Homo" (15th c.), "St. Vincent) by Vicente Gil and Manuel Vicente (16th c.), "Virgin with the Rose" by Francisco Campos (16th c.), "Mass of St. Gregory" probably by Gregório Lopes (16th c.), "Annunciation" (16th c.) and four paintings by António Nogueira (16th c.), "Last Supper" by Pedro Alexandrino (17th c.).
- Spanish paintings: St. Augustine, "St. Jerome" and "Martyrdom of St. Bartholomew" by José de Ribera (Spanish, 17th c.), "Head of St. John the Baptist" (Spanish School, 17th c.)
The museum houses also the funeral monuments in late-Gothic style of the first abbess D. Uganda and of the
Infante Fernando, Duke of Viseu and his wife Beatriz of Portugal.
The archaeological collection of Fernando Nunes Ribeiro, donated to museum in 1987 after forty years of archaeological research, is on display on the upper floors: Visigothic and Roman artefacts, gravestones from the
Bronze Age with antique writings of the
Iberians and
steles from the
Iron Age.
Among the several other artefacts in its collection, the museum possesses the
Escudela de Pero de Faria, a unique piece of Chinese porcelain from 1541.
Five Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun
Main article :
Letters of a Portuguese Nun
The love affair of
Mariana Alcoforado, a 17th c. nun from the convent of the Poor Ladies, with the French officer Noël Bouton, Marquis de Chamilly and later Marshall of France, has made Beja famous in (mainly Portuguese and French) literary circles. Looking from her window, the
janella de Mertola, she saw the young officer only once in 1641, while he was campaigning against the Spanish army in the
Alentejo. She fell in love at once and wrote him five passionate letters. The Portuguese version of these letters don't exist anymore. They were "translated" into French and published in
Brussels in 1669 and soon in several other languages. These lyrical letters full of absolute passion, hope, pleas and despair were an instant success. In the same year the original publisher, Claude Barbin, published a sequel, again written by a Portuguese "lady of society" with seven new letters added to the original five. Later, several hack writers wrote serial stories on the same theme. The interest in the se Portuguese love letters was so strong in the 17th century, that the word "portugaise" became synonymous for "passionate love letter". Even in recent years these letters have been transformed into a stage play "Cartas". It was performed in New York in the Bleecker Theatre’s Culture Project in 2001.
Parishes
Albernoa
Baleizão
Beja (Salvador)
Beja (Santa Maria da Feira)
Beja (Santiago Maior)
Beja (São João Baptista)
Beringel
Cabeça Gorda
Mombeja
Nossa Senhora das Neves
Quintos
Salvada
Santa Clara de Louredo
Santa Vitória
São Brissos
São Matias
Trigaches
Trindade
Sister cities
Further Information
Get more info on 'Beja Portugal'.
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