Ad
related to: evora portugal wikipedia in romana
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
João Manuel, Prince of Portugal Túlio Espanca, 1987 Maria Leal da Costa, 2009 Inês Cristina Zuber, 2015. Abd al-Majid ibn Abdun (c. 1050–1135 in Évora) was a poet from Al-Andalus; Maria of Portugal (1342–1375) a Portuguese infanta (princess), first daughter of King Peter I; Garcia de Resende (1470–1536) a Portuguese poet and editor.
The Roman Temple of Évora (Portuguese: Templo romano de Évora), also referred to as the Templo de Diana (albeit wrongly, after Diana, the ancient Roman goddess of the moon, the hunt, and chastity) is an ancient temple in the Portuguese city of Évora (civil parish of Sé e São Pedro).
The Roman villa of Tourega is in the parish of Nossa Senhora da Tourega in the Évora District of the Alentejo region of Portugal.During Roman occupation of Portugal it was part of the province of Lusitania, situated a few kilometers to the southwest of Civitas Ebora Liberalitas Julia, the modern-day Evora.
The Roman Temple of Évora (Portuguese: Templo romano de Évora), also referred to as the Templo de Diana (albeit wrongly, after Diana, the ancient Roman goddess of the moon, the hunt, and chastity) is an ancient temple in the Portuguese city of Évora (civil parish of Sé e São Pedro).
The territory of modern-day Portugal was Romanized following the events of the Second Punic War (3rd century BCE), through the Roman conquest of the Iberian Peninsula.. The Romans founded cities and Romanized some previously existing settlements.
The Palace of the Dukes of Cadaval is located in Évora historic centre, in Portugal, next-door to the Lóios Convent and Church (today a remarkable Pousada) and facing the Roman Temple of Évora. It belongs to the Duke of Cadaval family, and today it has a harmonious architectural elements combination: Moorish , Gothic and Manueline period ...
The Capela dos Ossos was built by Franciscan friars. [when?] It is a church of bones. An estimated 5,000 corpses were exhumed to decorate the walls of the chapel. [1] The bones, which came from ordinary people who were buried in Évora's medieval cemeteries, were arranged by the Franciscans in a variety of patterns.
The conquest of the important port city of Alcácer do Sal in 1158, by the king of Portugal made the occupation of the interior Alentejo possible, if not inevitable. [1] Évora was an important city in the west of the Iberian Peninsula and was taken by the Portuguese shortly afterwards.