Portugal
Pena National Palace

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    • Día 13

      Sintra

      1 de agosto de 2023, Portugal ⋅ 🌬 25 °C

      Dedichiamo la giornata alla visita di Sintra: partiamo da Lisbona e arriviamo in stazione in mattinata, da lì ci incamminiamo e raggiungiamo il Palazzo di Pena, di cui visitiamo giardini e interni.
      Ultimata la visita, scendiamo fino alla Quinta da Regaleira, ammirando le vedute sul Palazzo dei Mori durante la discesa.
      Una volta visitata la reggia e i giardini di Regaleira, percorriamo il centro storico passando davanti al Palazzo Nazionale di Sintra.
      Infine, rientriamo a Lisbona.
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    • Día 6

      Sintra, castillo de pena

      24 de agosto de 2022, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 21 °C

      Sintra (anteriormente Cintra) es una ciudad y municipio portugués ubicado a 25 km al noroeste de Lisboa. La perfecta armonía entre la naturaleza y el patrimonio de la ciudad llevó a la UNESCO a clasificar a la ciudad como Patrimonio Cultural de la Humanidad, en la categoría de paisaje cultural, en 1995. El parque nacional de sentirá se compone de varios castillos :el Castillo de los Moros, el Palacio de Sintra, Palacio Nacional de Pena,l Convento de los Capuchos y el Parque y Palacio de MonserrateLeer más

    • Día 10

      Palácio Nacional da Pena

      11 de septiembre de 2023, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      Der Palácio Nacional da Pena (deutsch Nationalpalast Pena) ist ein Schloss in der portugiesischen Stadt Sintra. Es wurde nach 1840 im Auftrag des portugiesischen Titularkönigs und Königsgemahls Ferdinand II. (1816–1885) auf den Ruinen eines Klosters errichtet.Leer más

    • Día 11

      Pena Palace

      1 de julio de 2022, Portugal ⋅ ☀️ 64 °F

      Sintra is in the mountains outside Lisbon - it's been inhabited since the paleolithic era and became a popular summer resort for Portuguese nobility due to its cool, green hillsides. Apparently it's still a popular resort town for the wealthy - there's still a little tourist tram down to the beach. The Pena Palace was built on the site of old monastery as a summer home in the 19th century by the husband of a Portuguese queen. It's very picturesque and a little ridiculous - a mishmash of colors, decoration and styles. It's very Disney princess. It's also surrounded by an elaborate forested park, with winding paths, moss-covered fountains and a grotto.Leer más

    • Día 10

      Palacio da Pena

      21 de septiembre de 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F

      》The Palacio da Pena sits atop a jagged rocky outcrop - the second highest peak (480m) of the Serra da Sintra hills.

      The site was originally a Hieronymite monastery, which had been long abandoned by the time Fernando II purchased the area in 1838. Sections of the original monastery can still be seen - the main courtyard is a two-storey Manueline cloister, and the Nossa Senhora da Pena chapel has been barely altered since the 16th century.

      The chief architect of the Palacio da Pena (Wilhelm Eschwege) was of German nationality and took inspiration from the Neuschwanstein castle in Bavaria, as well as from his travels through Asia and Africa and from Portugal itself. The rose-red painted tower shares many characteristics with the Torre de Belem in Lisbon, while the spikes on the gateway resemble the 16th-century Casa dos Bicos in the Alfama district of Lisbon.

      》Why did King Ferdinand II want to put this triton at the entrance to his palace?

      It’s believed that King Ferdinand II was the author of the design for this monster, crafted out of limestone, but where did the king find inspiration to create such a figure? What is its connection to the Palace and Sintra?

      One of the aspects is related to the architectural influences of the monument: the connection to the marine world, referring to the “Manueline revival that permeates the entire Palace of Pena”, says the curator. “It’s supporting position is inspired by the Manueline Window at the Convent of Tomar”, she adds.

      But the truth is that there could be an influence even older than this, based on the legends of Sintra. Over thousands of years, many stories have emerged about the presence of mythological characters on the region's beaches, where the land ends and the sea begins.

      The best known is specifically that of the triton, who lived in 'Fojo Well', close to Adraga Beach. According to Pliny the Elder (27-79 AD), in this area “(…) in a certain cave, a Merman was seen in the form that is well known, playing a conch shell”. “I have testimonies from distinguished members of the equestrian order attesting that they themselves saw a marine man in the ocean of Gades, with all parts of his body resembling a man”, adds the classic author, in his ‘Historiae Naturalis Libri XXXVII’.

      Centuries later, more precisely in 1554, when describing Necklaces in the work ‘Urbis Olisiponi Descriptio’, Damião de Góis states that “(…) not far from the village, under a rock overlooking the sea, there is a cave beaten by the ocean. The cave swallows the waves that penetrate inside and collide in a mess of water and foam, before vomiting them out again accompanied by the enormous noise of the waves. Hence our people believe that a Merman was once seen there singing with his shell”. The chronicler doesn’t refute this idea, since “in the Ancient Archives of the Kingdom, of which I myself am (…) in charge, there is still an ancient manuscript of a contract (…), in this document the tax on mermaids and other species of animals caught on the beaches is stated (…). From this it’s obviously deduced that mermaids were frequent in our waters at that time, since a law was enacted about them”. The law would apply not only to mermaids, but also to “Mermen and Nereides”.

      Damião de Góis also wrote that, at that time, it was even possible to find along the coast “a kind of men that the inhabitants of the area began to call marine men, due to their nature and origin, above all because they exhibited and retained coarseness or scales on the surface of their skin (…) as if they were vestiges of their ancient race. It has always been taken for granted that such beings owe their origin and ancestry to marine men or Mermen. All of this comes from the traditions of the ancestors that the Mermen sometimes jumped ashore, and gradually got used to playing on the beach; attracted by the sweetness of the fruit, which is very abundant in that region, they returned there frequently; through the ineffable cunning of the inhabitants, some of them were caught and then lovingly initiated into a more civilised and less savage way of life”.

      Thus, the presence of the triton in the Palace of Pena can also be seen as an ode to the legends of Sintra, the fantastical beings who, like King Ferdinand, loved this land so much that they decided to stay here.
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    • Día 35

      Sintra: Kultur und Kitsch nahe beinander

      21 de marzo de 2022, Portugal ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

      Ein echter Apriltag sollte uns heute erwarten. Erster Stopp unserer Fahrradtour war ein wirklich wunderschöner Wasserfall aus einem Märchen. Genauso geheimnisvoll war er auch zu finden. Ich glaube, hier war noch nie ein Tourist, außer wir natürlich ;-)

      In Portugal an Wasserfälle zu denken bedeutet, in erster Linie an den Peneda-Gerês-Nationalpark (im Norden) zu denken, denn hier liegt die Welt der Wasserfälle in Portugal. Ansonsten sind sie nicht so präsent, zumal man bedenken sollte, dass in den Sommermonaten die Wassermenge natürlich geringer ist als im Winter d.h. in der Regenzeit. Wenn man sich anschaut, wie leer die Stauseen zurzeit sind, war der nicht gerade auf unserer Route liegende Wasserfall echt gnädig mit uns.

      Jetzt aber auf nach Sintra. Vorweggenommen: Stefan ist an der Tourenplanung durch die sieben Paläste der Gegend gescheitert. Trotz Google Street View und Kommot schien es keine wirklichen mit Fahrrad befahrbaren Wege zu den Schlössern zu geben. Tipp: Kauf eines Hop-on-hop-off-Discover-Sintra-Tickets am Busbahnhof. Ich schwöre euch, diese Wege wollt ihr nicht mit dem Fahrrad erkunden. Wie der Bus überhaupt diese Serpentinen hoch gekommen ist, ist mir bis heute ein Rätsel. Da die Fußmärsche von den Busstops zu den Sehenswürdigkeiten immer noch durchaus anspruchsvoll waren, haben wir uns dann auch auf zwei Highlights beschränkt: Moorish Castle und Pena Palace und natürlich eine im Ticket enthaltene kleine Stadtrundfahrt.
      Ich wäre gerne noch in den Park von Monserrat Palace gefahren, aber die haben schon um 17:00 Uhr geschlossen - und wir waren mächtig platt, als wir danach wieder auf unseren Rädern den Heimweg antraten.

      Die Ruinen des Castelo dos Mouros erheben sich ziemlich hoch über Sintra, so dass sie in den Wolken zunächst verschwanden. Sie wurde auf einem Felsvorsprung errichtet, der normalerweise freien Blick auf die Küste sowie die Umgebung bot, was zur Verteidigung der gesamten Region früher sicher von großem Nutzen war. Irgendwann im 12. Jahrhundert eroberten die christlichen Kreuzritter die Burg von den Mauren, überließen diese dann jedoch sich selbst, sodass sie irgendwann zerfiel und vom dichten Wald, der die Hügel der Serra de Sintra bedeckt, zurückerobert wurde. Daher strahlt die Burg im Gegensatz zu allen anderen Touristenattraktionen im direkten Umfeld insbesondere bei dem Wetter am heutigen Tag eine besonders spannende mystische Atmosphäre aus. Auch das hier die alten Steine beherrschende Moos trug zu diesem Gefühl bei, in einer verlorenen Welt zu sein.
      Im größten Kontrast: Der verspielte, bizarr/kitschig-bunte Palast von Pena, die einstige Sommerresidenz der Könige Portugals, wird vielfach als „Neuschwanstein von Portugal“ angepriesen. Ein portugiesischer Besucher knurrt ärgerlich: „Blödsinn, als der Bayer den Auftrag gab, lebten hier längst unsere Monarchen.“ Die historischen Fakten geben ihm recht: Pena war 1854 fertig, mit dem Alpenschloss wurde 1869 erst begonnen.
      Bevor die wunderschönen Parkanlagen um das Schloss angelegt wurden, war der Gebirgszug übrigens so kahl wie eine Mondlandschaft, was dem Massiv im Volksmund den Namen Monte da Lua eintrug (Deutsch: Mondberg). Neben einheimischen Kiefern, Eichen und Ginster findet man hier auch beeindruckende kalifornische Mammutbäume.
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    • Día 10

      Palacio da Pena Chapel

      21 de septiembre de 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 68 °F

      》The Palace of Pena Chapel resulted from the adaptation of the former Monastery Church of Our Lady of Pena.

      Up until the abolition of religious orders, this church was open to the faithful (who would arrive at the Pena monastery along the Pilgrims Way).

      The main altar retable from the former church, in alabaster and limestone from the Sintra region, was worked on between 1529 and 1532, by the sculptor of French origin, Nicolas de Chanterenne, and resulted from a commission from João III, son of Manuel I, the founder of the convent.

      A particular highlight is the stained glass window installed by Ferdinand II in the wall opposite the main altar, which dates to 1840, shortly after the Palace began construction, which was produced by the famous stained glass workshop in Nuremberg belonging to the Kellner family. The glass reveals artistic intentions but also the political legitimacy underlying the construction of the Palace.

      》Castelo dos Mouros (Moors Castle)

      A privileged vantage point looking out over the Atlantic coastline, the floodplain and the Sintra Hills, the millennium-old Moorish Castle, founded under Islamic rule, occupied a then strategic position for defending both the surrounding territory and the maritime access routes to the city of Lisbon. The artefacts found on this site identify how, in between the walls and their adjoining areas, there lived a population in an area now named the Islamic Quarter.

      The silos, structures carved into the rocks, may be encountered both inside and outside the fortification and were used to conserve certain foodstuffs such as cereals.

      The Moors lived here through to 1147, when Sintra was handed over to Afonso Henriques, the first King of Portugal, following the conquest of the cities of Lisbon and Santarém. Strategically and as a means of defending these lands, the running of the town of Sintra and its immediate hinterlands was bestowed on Gualdim Pais, a master in the Knights Templar, who received a charter in 1154.

      With the settlement of a Christian population in the Moorish Castle, the Islamic Quarter began to disappear and give way to a Medieval town with its occupation ongoing through to the 15th century. At that time, the site was steadily subject to abandonment given that, with the conflicts between the Moors and Christians long over, the population no longer felt the need to seek shelter within the vicinity of the fortification. This Medieval town included the Church of São Pedro de Canaferrim, built between the two rings of walls.



      Already into the 19th century, and in keeping with the Romantic spirit prevailing in that period, King Ferdinand II undertook restoration work on the castle, breathing new life into the medieval imaginary surrounding this site. These renovation works damaged part of the Christian burial grounds of the Church and, for this reason, the order was given to build a tomb to house the bones found there. Given the inability to distinguish whether these were Christian or Moorish human remains, the tomb bears the inscription: “What man brought together, only God may separate”.
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    • Día 40

      Pena Palace

      23 de octubre de 2023, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 13 °C

      We pre-booked our tickets to visit Pena Palace and I am so glad we did. We walked into Sintra to catch a public bus up to the palace, we found the bus stop and waited. What we experienced was a unending line of tour buses letting out huge groups right where we were waiting. It was like tsunami of tour groups - our worst nightmare. The buses were lined up four in a row, double and triple parked, blocking traffic and generally causing pandemonium. A local plod eventually stepped in and restored a bit of order.

      Our bus, the 434, eventually managed to get through but had nowhere to stop. Finally, there was room and the bus driver pulled in. We all hopped on and headed off on what we had been told was about a 15 minute bus ride up to the palace. We stopped near Sintra train station to let more people on and then stayed put for at least 15 minutes. We could see the clock ticking down to our 10:30 am entry time (which we were told was strictly enforced), so I asked the driver when we might start moving. He said that he would be departing in 5 minutes but, not to worry they, would let us in. We were only dropped off outside the gate of the Peña Palace at 10.40 am. Then, to my horror, I realised we have to schlepp up a steep hill to get to the castle. By the time we reached the line it was 10.55 am and the 11 am group were about to be let in. Lucky, the guy scanning tickets took pity and told us to walk ahead of the 11 am group. We finally entered the palace just before 11 am and I was sweating from head to toe.

      I could now breath normally again and slowly recovered as we walked slowly through this most impressive building following the long conga line of other tourists. Peña Palace stands on the top of a hill in the mountains above the town of Sintra. On a clear day the castle can easily be seen from Lisbon. It is a national monument and is one of the major expressions of 19th century Romanticism in the world. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the seven wonders of Portugal. And, it’s very crowded.

      The castle’s history started in the Middle Ages when a chapel dedicated to Our Lady of Peña was built on top of the hill above Sintra. Then in 1493, King John, accompanied by his wife Queen Leonor, made a pilgrimage to the site to fulfill a vow. His successor, King Manual I, was also fond of this sanctuary, and ordered the construction of the monastery, which was donated to the Order of Saint Jerome. For centuries Peña was a small quiet place for meditation, housing a maximum of 18 monks.

      In the 18th century the monastery was severely damaged by lightening and then the Great Lisbon earthquake, reduced it to ruins. For decades the ruins remained untouched. In 1838, King Ferdinand II decided to acquire the old monastery, all the surrounding lands, the nearby Castle of the Moors and a few other estates in the area.
      He then proceeded to transform the remains of the monastery into a palace that would serve as a summer residence for the Portuguese royal family. Construction took place between 1842 and 1854.

      In 1995, the palace and the rest of the Cultural Landscape of Sintra were classified as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

      It is simply breathtaking to see and the craftsmanship on display is quite wonderful. There area a number of different styles including Neo-Gothic, Neo-Manueline, Neo-Islamic and Neo- Renaissance. We spent a couple of hours exploring the palace and it’s gardens.
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    • Día 17

      Pena Palace

      15 de octubre de 2023, Portugal

      From Sintra we go up a twisty road through a forest to Pena Palace which was in the clouds. Because we were only six in a mini van we managed to get in before the rain got heavy. Later ones got absolutely soaked.
      Beautiful rooms inside King Ferdinands palace, he was more or less the last king of Portugal. His son reigned for two years after the kings suspicious death, but he was only seven, before Portugal became a republic.
      There are extensive gardens, but because of the torrential rain, we skipped touring them.
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    • Día 2

      Sintra - Palacio de Pena

      5 de febrero, Portugal ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

      Nachdem ich Lissabon schon etwas kenne, gungs heute mal raus aus der Stadt in den Ort Sintra, wo sich einige Paläste befinden. Erster Stopp der Palacio de Pena, wo die früheren Könige von Portugal gewohnt haben. Angereist sind wir mit dem Zug und anschließend kann man sich ein Tagesticket für die Busse 434 und 435 lösen, die einen zu den einzelnen Palästen führen.Leer más

    También podrías conocer este lugar por los siguientes nombres:

    Pena National Palace, Palácio Nacional da Pena

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