Idiomas:
ANGRA DO HEROÍSMO  |   ÉVORA  |   GUIMARAES  |   LUGO  |   PORTO  |   SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA  
Patrimonio
Heritage - Angra do Heroísmo - 2005 © Oficina Virtual de Turismo Central within its ultra-peripheral location, Angra do Heroísmo has always played the role of host of the idyllic Azorean archipelago.

During the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries its welcoming bay was at the centre of North Atlantic sea trade. At the heyday of the sea trading Portuguese empire, Angra was the main stopping port for the routes to India, Africa and the Americas, where ships were supplied, repaired, and protected from the attacks of pirates and corsairs.

Discovered during the midfifteenth century, it was the first of the Azorean towns to be granted the title of city, in 1534. In that same year it was chosen as the seat of the Diocese of Angra and the Azores islands, which it still is to this day.

In the mid sixteenth century, during the series of disputes for the Portuguese throne between Philip II of Spain and D. António, Prior do Crato, Terceira supported the latter. It resisted Philip’s domination and stayed under the Portuguese flag from 1580 until 1583. Reminders for posterity of this resistance are the Battle of Salga and the names of Ciprião de Figueiredo and Brianda Pereira.

When it was conquered, Angra already had a historic centre.

The Castilian presence left examples of military architecture, of which we should feature the nearly 6 km of walls of the S. João Baptista Fortress, the nucleus of a network of fortifications that used to surround the entire island.

During the disputes between liberals and absolutists, fidelity to the crown was put to the test once again. D. Pedro IV moved to Angra and there laid the constitutional and military foundations of his struggle for power. On March 15, 1830, he declared Angra capital of the kingdom. Angra’s support for the constitutional cause won it the titles “do Heroísmo” and “Mui Nobre, Leal e Sempre Constante”(Most noble, loyal and ever true) and the Ordem da Torre e Espada (Order of the tower and sword) – for Valour, Loyalty and Merit.

Today, it boasts a rich architectural heritage, the legacy of the economic and political importance it once had. Sculptures, gilt work, tile work and furniture made of exotic wood fill its mansions, palaces, churches and monuments. In spite of being partially destroyed by an earthquake in 1980, the historic centre was rebuilt in its entirety.

The final result is an ample Renaissance town that is surprising for its almost methodical straight lines, and for its clear functionality and hierarchy. Acknowledged as Heritage of Humanity since 1983, Angra do Heroísmo welcomes the visit of all who wish to know it.
Portada :  Angra do Heroísmo