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ANGRA DO HEROÍSMO  |   ÉVORA  |   GUIMARAES  |   LUGO  |   PORTO  |   SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA  
2005 © Oficina Virtual de Turismo At the height of the Renaissance, Évora became dotted in monuments. Some of them were grandiose while others were more utilitarian, but all are worthy of note. Such as the 1556 Renaissance fountain, which was the work of Diogo de Torralva, and was ordered by the city’s patron, Cardinal King D. Henrique. His spherically-shaped drinking fountain was one of the main sources of water in the old city. This fountain was built with public donations from the square’s neighbours; one of those who took part was the city’s most renowned topographer, André de Burgos.

The Porta de Moura Square also has other points of interest. Facing the fountain is Cordovil house, with its manuelino-mudejar style mirador, a mixture of the unique style of the expansion (the manueline), with the Moorish-inspired style (the mudejar). Next to is the house that belonged to the celebrated 17th century economist Severim de Faria, and is where the “Academy of the Ambiences,” which was dedicated to historical and literary pursuits, was based for a time. Between the towers that guard the old Moura Gate is the manueline window known as Garcia de Resende, Évora’s poet and chronicler of the Portuguese Renaissance, as well as the author of the Cancioneiro Geral, (a compliation of all Portuguese poetic tradition from the 15th to the 18th Centuries).
Portada :  Évora :  Puntos de interés