When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: portuguese houses in goa with private

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Goan houses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goan_houses

    The Goan Hindu Architectural style is different from the Portuguese-influenced style. Hindu houses have little colonial influence. Most of the big houses have a courtyard called as Rajangan in Konkani where a Tulasi Vrindavan is seen. A special place called a Soppo is often used for relaxing. Goan traditional Hindu houses have the following ...

  3. Architecture of Goan Catholics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_Goan_Catholics

    A traditional Portuguese-influenced Goan Catholic home. Basilica of Bom Jesus, another example of Portuguese architecture. The traditional pre-Portuguese homes were inward-looking with small windows; this reflected the secluded role of women. The houses opened into courtyards, and rarely opened onto streets.

  4. Fontainhas (quarter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fontainhas_(quarter)

    Fontainhas (or Bairro das Fontainhas, in Portuguese) is an old Latin Quarter in Panjim, capital city of the state of Goa, India.It maintains its Portuguese influence, particularly through its architecture, which includes narrow and picturesque winding streets like those found in many European cities, old villas and buildings with projecting balconies painted in the traditional tones of pale ...

  5. Churches and convents of Goa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Churches_and_Convents_of_Goa

    The Church of Our Lady of the Rosary, built in 1543, is the oldest of the Old Goa churches still standing.Initially, it was a parish church, then collegial. On the outside, the church looks like a small fortress; the entrance porch flanked by small cylindrical towers with cupolas is typical of late-Gothic and Manueline Portugal, particularly in the Alentejo region. [6]

  6. Comunidades of Goa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comunidades_of_Goa

    The emergence of private property in land created a new set of socio-economic relationships at the village level, especially the comunidades and the ghar-bhaatt, the two principal forms of land tenure that came to characterise Portuguese Goa. [11]

  7. Colva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colva

    Colva (Portuguese: Colvá) is a coastal village situated in the Salcete taluka, in South Goa district, of Goa state on the west coast of the Indian subcontinent. Colva Beach (Portuguese: Praia de Colvá) spans about 2.5 km (1.6 mi) along a sandy coastline of approximately 25 km (16 mi) extending from Bogmalo in the north to Cabo de Rama in the south.

  8. Portuguese colonial architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portuguese_colonial...

    The Cathedral of Goa, the cathedral for Portuguese India, embodies most all of what Portuguese colonial religious architecture stood for. The cathedral was built to commemorate a Christian victory, that of Afonso de Albuquerque over the Moslems, and the edifice is built in a grandiose Portuguese classical style.

  9. Ribandar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribandar

    The Santa Casa da Misericórdia or Holy House of Charity, also called the Royal Portuguese Hospital, today houses a management school, the Ribandar campus of the Goa Institute of Management. It is a heritage structure and has been left unchanged despite the pressures of housing a college.