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Belém Tower

Belém Tower (Portuguese: Torre de Belém, pronounced [ˈtoʁɨ ðɨ βɨˈlɐ̃j]; literally: Bethlehem Tower), officially the Tower of Saint Vincent (Portuguese: Torre de São Vicente) is a 16th-century fortification located in Lisbon that served as a point of embarkation and disembarkation for Portuguese explorers and as a ceremonial gateway to Lisbon.[2][3] This tower symbolizes Portugal's maritime and colonial power in early modern Europe. It was built during the height of the Portuguese Renaissance, and is a prominent example of the Portuguese Manueline style,[4] but it also incorporates other architectural styles, such as the minarets, which are inspired by Moorish architecture.[5] The structure was built from lioz limestone and is composed of a bastion and a 30-metre (100 ft),[6] four-storey tower.

Belém Tower
Torre de Belém, Torre de São Vicente
The quarter façade of the tower on the bank of the Tagus river
38°41′30″N 9°12′58″W / 38.69167°N 9.21611°W / 38.69167; -9.21611
LocationLisbon, Portugal
DesignerFrancisco de Arruda
TypeFortification
MaterialLimestone (lioz)
Visitors377.780 visitors (2022)[1]
Beginning datec. 1514
Completion date1519
Websitewww.patrimoniocultural.gov.pt/pt/museus-e-monumentos/dgpc/m/torre-de-belem/
Part ofMonastery of the Hieronymites and Tower of Belém in Lisbon
CriteriaCultural: iii, vi
Reference263bis
Inscription1983 (7th Session)
TypeNon-movable
CriteriaNational Monument
Designated10 January 1907
Reference no.IPA.00004065

Since 1983, the tower has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site, along with the Jerónimos Monastery. It is often portrayed as a symbol of Europe's Age of Discoveries[3] and as a metonym for Portugal or Lisbon, given its landmark status. It has incorrectly been stated that the tower was built in the middle of the Tagus and now sits near the shore because the river was redirected after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. In fact, the tower was built on a small island in the Tagus river near the Lisbon shore.[5][7]

History edit

 
The tower was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983 and included in the registry of the Seven Wonders of Portugal in 2007.

In the late 15th century, King John II had designed a defence system for the mouth of the Tagus that depended on the fortresses of Cascais and São Sebastião (or Torre Velha) in Caparica on the south side of the river.[5][8] These fortresses did not completely protect the river's mouth, and further protection was required.[8] In his "Chronicle of John II" (Chronica de D. Joao II), which appeared in 1545,[9] the author Garcia de Resende affirmed the king's opinion that the defences of Lisbon were inadequate, and that he had insisted on building fortifications along the entrance to the River Tagus to supplement the existing defences.[10] To this end, he ordered the "making of a strong fort", but died before any plans were drawn. King Manuel I of Portugal revisited the proposal twenty years later and ordered the construction of a military fortification on the northern margin of the Tagus at Belém.[8] In 1513, Lourenço Fernandes wrote a letter to his friends referring to the king's intention of constructing a tower near Restelo Velho, having determined it to be essential.

 
Portuguese presence in India , Bengal Gulf and Himalayas (max extend) between the 16th and 17th century.

The presence of this military element was also a celebration of the round trip of the Portuguese to India and a way of receiving the fleets that arrived at the mouth of the Tagus, glorifying the feat, as if it were a mimetic of what those who arrived could identify with the they had seen in the East. The best example is the carved rhinoceros, the result of an offer from an Indian ruler who offered it to King Dom Manuel. This Rhinoceros would be the same one that Albert Durer would immortalize in his drawings.

The project was started on a basaltic rock outcrop a short distance from the riverbank, using some of the stone being collected to build the Monastery of Santa Maria de Belém. The tower was designed by military architect Francisco de Arruda,[11] named "Master of the works of the Belém stronghold" by King Manuel,[12] and in 1516 he began receiving 763 blocks and 504 stones for its construction, delivered by Diogo Rodrigues, treasurer for the project. As construction progressed, a man-of-war called the Grande Nau (Great Ship), a heavily armed, 1000–ton ship continued to guard the estuary at the mouth of the Tagus until the fort's completion.[13][14]

The building was finished in 1519, just two years before Manuel's death, and Gaspar de Paiva was temporarily stationed to command the fortress;[15] his commission was made permanent on 15 September 1521, when he was appointed the first Captain-General, or alcalde, and the fortress was named the Castle of St Vincent (Castelo de São Vicente de Belém),[10][16] in honour of the patron saint of Lisbon.

In 1571, Francisco de Holanda advised the monarch that it was necessary to improve the coastal defences in order to protect the kingdom's capital. He suggested the construction of a "strong and impregnable" fort that could easily defend Lisbon and that the Belém Tower "should be strengthened, repaired and completed...that it has cost so much without being completed". D'Holanda designed an improved rectangular bastion with several turrets. In 1580, after a few hours of battle, the garrison stationed in the tower surrendered to Spanish forces under the command of the Duke of Alba. After this defeat, the dungeons of the tower served as a prison until 1830.[10][16] It was also during the last quarter of the 16th century that the construction of the Philippine Barracks began. A rectangular two-storey space was constructed over the bastion, giving the tower the visual profile that it has retained to the present, with sculpted crosses of the Order of Christ and domed turrets.

In 1589, Philip I of Portugal ordered Italian engineer Friar João Vicenzio Casale to build a well-defended fort to be constructed in place of the "useless castle of São Vicente".[10] The engineer submitted three designs, proposing that the bastion would be surrounded by another bastion of greater dimensions, but the project never materialized.

A 1633 codex for the House of Cadaval was inserted into one of the floors, in one of the arches of the barracks, and in the four largest arches at the top of the southern façade. Similarly, a reference to the year 1655 was inscribed on a plaque placed on the northern wall of the cloister, which certified the tower's function as a customs control point and for navigation along the Tagus; vessels were obliged to pay a tax as they entered the harbour, which was imposed incrementally.

Between 1780 and 1782, under the reign of Maria I of Portugal, General Guilherme de Valleré constructed the Fort of Bom Sucesso, whose battery was connected by a western corridor wall to the tower.[10] When French forces invaded Lisbon during the Peninsular War, detachments of their troops were quartered in the tower from 1808 to 1814. After the French retreated, Lord Beresford advised that coastal artillery batteries should be reinforced along the Tagus, and specifically noted that stronger batteries should be placed on the sides of the tower's bastion, with carts placed to better protect the soldiers, since the walls were very low.

 
French ships exchanging fire with the tower at the Battle of the Tagus during the Liberal Wars (1831)

King Miguel I (1828–1834) used the dungeons to imprison his liberal opponents,[6] while another level was used as a custom house for ships until the duty on foreign ships was abolished in 1833.[10][16][17] The tower received military upgrades in 1589 and 1809–1814.

During the reign of Maria II, Almeida Garrett protested the site's degradation and under the persuasion of the Duke of Terceira, renovations were begun by military engineer António de Azevedo e Cunha.[10] He demolished the Philippine barracks and extended revivalist elements in 1845–46 (such as the armoured merlons, the balustrade of the veranda along the southern façade, the laced fascia in the cloister and the niche with an image of the Virgin and Child).

In 1865–67 a beacon was installed on the southeast terrace of the building and a telegraph service was started, while nearby a gas factory was built, producing smoke that prompted many protests.[10] The first moves to preserve and rehabilitate the tower began in the latter part of the 20th century. First, the tower was transferred to the Ministry of Finance in 1940, which undertook small conservation works.[10] Then the military quarters on the battlements were removed and the inner cloister was built. The architectural landscape designer António Viana Barreto began a three-year project in 1953 to integrate the tower with the local shoreline.[10] In 1983 the site hosted the 17th European Exhibition on Art, Science and Culture, and various projects involving the building were undertaken, among them covering the cloister with a transparent plastic cupola. In the same year the Belém Tower was classified by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.

In the 1990s, the property was transferred to the Instituto Português do Património Arquitectónico (forerunner of IGESPAR), which began a full restoration of the building that lasted from February 1997 to January 1998; this included reinforcing the tower and bastion, reinforcing the south balcony supports with stainless steel rods and epoxy resin, treating the mortar joints, and general structural cleaning. The statues of Saint Vincent of Saragossa and the Archangel Michael received the same treatment.[18] In 1999 the project received the Europa Nostra award for its restoration of the exterior.[14] The Belém Tower was added on 7 July 2007 to the registry of the Seven Wonders of Portugal.

Architecture edit

The Belém Tower is situated on the northern bank of the Tagus River in the civil parish of Santa Maria de Belém, municipality of Lisbon, accessible at the western end of the Avenida de Brasília by a small bridge. Nearby are the Jeronimos Monastery to the east and the Forte do Bom Sucesso to the west, while to the north are the tower Governor's residence, the old Governor's residence for the Bom Successo fort, and the Chapel of São Jerónimo.

The tower is isolated along the riverbank, between the dock of Bom Sucesso and Pedrouços, on a basaltic outcropping of rocks belonging to the geomorphological volcanic complex of Lisboa-Mafra.[19] Although various guides have claimed that the tower was built in the middle of the Tagus, and now sits near the shore after the 1755 earthquake redirected the river, they are incorrect. The Portuguese Ministry of Culture and the Institute of Architectural Heritage indicate that the tower was constructed on a small island near the bank of the Tagus, opposite the shore of Restelo. As development extended the shoreline progressively, more and more of the northern bank crept southwards into the Tagus, the tower becoming integrated into the riverbank over time.[5][7][20]

The Belém Tower was built from a beige-white limestone local to the Lisbon area and thereabouts called Lioz.[21] The building is divided into two parts: the bastion and the four-story tower located on the north side of the bastion.

The 16th-century tower is considered one of the principal works of the Portuguese Late Gothic Manueline style.[4][20] This is especially apparent in its elaborate rib vaulting, crosses of the Order of Christ, armillary spheres and twisted rope, common to the nautically inspired organic Manueline style.[4][7]

Exterior edit

 
Bastion terrace with its Moorish bartizan turrets and cupolas from the northwest.
 
The inner cloister of the tower displaying the back side of the niche of the virgin and two turrets

The building's plan consists of a rectangular tower and an irregular, hexagonal bastion, with elongated flanks, that projects south into the river. It is basically a large articulated vertical space resting on a horizontal stone slab, covered by masonry enclosures. On the northeast angle of the structure, protected by a defensive wall with bartizans, is a drawbridge to access the bulwark, decorated in plant motifs, surmounted by the royal coat of arms and flanked by small columns, complemented with armillary spheres. The Manueline armillary spheres appear at the tower's entrance, symbolizing Portugal's nautical explorations, and were used on King Manuel I's personal banner to represent Portuguese discoveries during his rule.[7][22][23] The decorative carved, twisted rope and elegant knots also point to Portugal's nautical history and are common elements of the Manueline style.[4][7]

On the outside of the lower bastion, the walls have spaces for 17 cannons with embrasures affording a view of the river.[24] The upper tier of the bastion is crowned by a small wall with bartizans in strategic places, decorated by rounded shields with the cross of the Order of Christ encircling the platform. King Manuel I was a member of the Order of Christ,[25] thus the cross of the Order of Christ is used numerous times on the parapets.[3][7] These were a symbol of Manuel's military power, as the knights of the Order of Christ participated in several military conquests in that era.[25] The bartizans, cylindrical turrets (guerites) in the corners that served as watchtowers, have corbels with zoomorphic ornaments and domes covered with ridges unusual in European architecture, topped with ornate finials. The bases of the turrets have images of beasts, including a rhinoceros.[5][16] This rhinoceros is considered to be the first sculpture of such an animal in Western European art[5] and probably depicts the rhinoceros that Manuel I sent to Pope Leo X in 1515.[26]

While the tower is predominantly Manueline in style,[4] it also incorporates features of other architectural styles.[5] It was built by the military architect Francisco de Arruda, who had already supervised the construction of several fortresses in Portuguese territories in Morocco.[12][16] The influence of Moorish architecture is manifested in the delicate decorations, the arched windows, the balconies, and the ribbed cupolas of the watchtowers.[3]

The tower has four storeys, with fenestrations and battlements, the ground floor being occupied by a vaulted cistern. On the first floor, there is a south-facing rectangular door with arched windows on the east and north, and bartizans in the northeast and northwest corners. The southern part of the second floor is dominated by a covered veranda with a loggia (matacães), consisting of an arcade of seven arches, resting on large corbels with balusters. It is covered by laced stonework to form a porch, and its sloped roof ends in a sculpted twisted rope.[6] The eastern, northern and western walls are occupied by double-arched enclosures, with the northeast and northwest corners occupied by statues of Saint Vincent of Saragossa and the archangel Michael in niches. The third floor has twin windows in the northern, eastern and western façades, with balusters, interspersed by two armillary spheres and large relief with the Royal coat of arms. The final floor is encircled by a terrace with shields of the Order of Christ, and a northern arched door and eastern arched window. The terrace is enclosed by a low wall with colonnaded pyramidal merlons with bartizans in the four corners. A similar terrace above this floor offers a view of the surrounding landscape.[27][28]

Interior edit

 
Interior casemate of the main bastion showing the cannon niches
 
A view from the second floor loggia
 
Tourists visiting inside

The interior of the bastion, with a circular staircase at the north end, has two contiguous halls with vaulted ceilings supported by masonry arches, as well as four storage lockers and sanitary facilities. On the ground floor bunker, the floor is inclined towards the outside, while the ceilings are supported by masonry pilasters and vaulted spines. Gothic rib vaulting is evident in this casemate,[29] the rooms of the tower[30] and the cupolas of the watchtowers on the bastion terrace.[3] Peripheral compartments on the edges of the bunker allow the individual cannons to occupy their own space, with the ceiling designed with several asymmetrical domes of various heights. The ancillary storerooms were later used as prison cells.[31]

Two archways open to the main cloister in the north and south, while six broken arches stretch along the eastern and western parts of the cloister, interspersed with square pillars in the bastion interior, with gargoyle facets. The open cloister above the casemate, although decorative, was designed to dispel cannon smoke.[16][29] The upper level is connected by a railing decorated with crosses of the Order of Christ, while at the terrace the space has rising columns topped with armillary spheres. This space could also be used for light calibre infantry. This was the first Portuguese fortification with a two-level gun emplacement and marks a new development in military architecture. Some of the decoration dates from the renovation of the 1840s and is Neo-Manueline in style, like the decoration of the small cloister on the bastion.[16]

On the southern portion of the cloister terrace is an image of the Virgin and Child. The statue of the Virgin of Belém, also referred to as Nossa Senhora de Bom Successo (Our Lady of Good Success), Nossa Senhora das Uvas (Our Lady of the Grapes) or the Virgem da Boa Viagem (Virgin of Safe Homecoming) is depicted holding a child in her right hand and a bunch of grapes in her left.

The tower is about 12 metres (39 ft) wide and 30 metres (98 ft) tall.[6] The first-floor interior contains the Sala do Governador (Governor's Hall), an octagonal space that opens into the cistern, while in the northeast and northwest corners are corridors that link to the bartizans. A small door provides access via a spiral staircase to the subsequent floors. On the second floor, the Sala dos Reis (King's Hall) opens to the loggia overlooking the river, while a small corner fireplace extends from this floor to the third floor fireplace in the Sala das Audiências (Audience Hall). The ceilings of all three floors are covered in hollow concrete slabs. The fourth floor chapel has a vaulted rib ceiling with niches emblematic of the Manueline style, supported by carved corbels.

References edit

  1. ^ Sofia (2023). Casa Yes. Consultado em 04 de outubro de 2023
  2. ^ The Dock and Harbour Authority. Foxlow Publications, Limited. 1969. p. 335.
  3. ^ a b c d e UNESCO. "Monastery of the Hieronymites and Tower of Belém in Lisbon". United Nations. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d e Donald F. Lach (1994). Asia in the making of Europe. University of Chicago Press. pp. 57–64. ISBN 0-226-46730-9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Turismo de Portugal (Portugal Tourism). . Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  6. ^ a b c d Walter Crum Watson (1908). Portuguese architecture. A. Constable & Co. Ltd. pp. 181–182. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  7. ^ a b c d e f IGESPAR – Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico (Portuguese Institute of Architectural and Archaeological Heritage) (2006). . Archived from the original on 7 November 2010. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  8. ^ a b c IGESPAR – Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico, ed. (2011). (in Portuguese). Lisbon. Archived from the original on 2 August 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  9. ^ Elisabeth Feist Hirsch (31 July 1967). Damião de Gois: The Life and Thought of a Portuguese Humanist, 1502–1574. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 197. ISBN 978-90-247-0195-7.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j IGESPAR –Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico, ed. (2011). (in Portuguese). Lisbon. Archived from the original on 2 August 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  11. ^ Colum Hourihane (2012). The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 277. ISBN 978-0-19-539536-5.
  12. ^ a b Justino Mendes de Almeida (1992). De Olisipo a Lisboa: estudos olisiponenses. Edições Cosmos. pp. 45–46. ISBN 978-972-9170-75-1.
  13. ^ "Tower of Belém". World Monuments Fund. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  14. ^ a b IPPAR – Instituto Português do Património Arquitectónico (Portuguese Institute of Architectural Heritage) (2006). . Archived from the original on 20 December 2009. Retrieved 9 December 2009.
  15. ^ Paiva was the brother of King Manuel's tutor.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g Ministry of Culture (2000). "History/Introduction". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  17. ^ Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) (1835). The Penny cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. C. Knight. p. 172.
  18. ^ Ministry of Culture (2000). "Conservation and Restoration: Restoration works timetable". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009.
  19. ^ João Pais (6 October 2011). The Paleogene and Neogene of Western Iberia (Portugal): A Cenozoic record in the European Atlantic domain. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 35. ISBN 978-3-642-22401-0.
  20. ^ a b Mark Ellingham; John Fisher; Graham Kenyon (2002). The Rough Guide to Portugal (10th ed.). Rough Guides, Ltd. p. 97. ISBN 1-85828-877-0.
  21. ^ Figueiredo; Aires-Barros; Basto; Graca; Mauricio (2007). R. Přikryl (ed.). Building Stone Decay: From Diagnosis to Conservation. B.J. Smith. Geological Society of London. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-86239-218-2.
  22. ^ Instituto Camões (2005). "The Star of Cabral". Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  23. ^ Martins, António. . Bandeiras de Portugal (in Portuguese). Bandeiras do Bacano. Archived from the original on 23 February 2007. Retrieved 24 February 2007.
  24. ^ DK Publishing (2012). Great Buildings. DK Publishing. p. 113. ISBN 978-1-4654-0774-0.
  25. ^ a b "Order of the Knights of Christ". Catholic Encyclopedia. Wikisource, The Free Library. 1913. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  26. ^ L. C. Rookmaaker; Marvin L. Jones; Heinz-Georg Klös; Richard J. Reynolds III (1998). The Rhinoceros in Captivity: A List of 2439 Rhinoceroses Kept from Roman Times to 1994. Kugler Publications. p. 80. ISBN 978-90-5103-134-8.
  27. ^ Mary Ann Sullivan (2005). "Belém Tower (Torre de Belém)". Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  28. ^ Ministry of Culture (2000). "Tower Terrace". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2009.
  29. ^ a b Ministry of Culture (2000). "Bulwark". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  30. ^ Ministry of Culture (2000). "Chapel". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 7 December 2009.
  31. ^ Ministry of Culture (2000). "Bulwark terrace". Archived from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 7 December 2009.

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  • Silva, Augusto Vieira da (1928), "Torre de Belém, Projectos de Remodelação no séc. XVI", Revista de Arqueologia e História (in Portuguese), vol. 6, Lisbon{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Sanches, José Dias (1929), Apontamentos e Croquis à Pena Sobre o Mosteiro dos Jerónimos e Torre de Belém (in Portuguese), Lisbon{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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External links edit

belém, tower, this, article, about, tower, lisbon, portugal, córdoba, spain, torre, belén, portuguese, torre, belém, pronounced, ˈtoʁɨ, ðɨ, βɨˈlɐ, literally, bethlehem, tower, officially, tower, saint, vincent, portuguese, torre, são, vicente, 16th, century, f. This article is about the tower in Lisbon Portugal For the one in Cordoba Spain see Torre de Belen Belem Tower Portuguese Torre de Belem pronounced ˈtoʁɨ dɨ bɨˈlɐ j literally Bethlehem Tower officially the Tower of Saint Vincent Portuguese Torre de Sao Vicente is a 16th century fortification located in Lisbon that served as a point of embarkation and disembarkation for Portuguese explorers and as a ceremonial gateway to Lisbon 2 3 This tower symbolizes Portugal s maritime and colonial power in early modern Europe It was built during the height of the Portuguese Renaissance and is a prominent example of the Portuguese Manueline style 4 but it also incorporates other architectural styles such as the minarets which are inspired by Moorish architecture 5 The structure was built from lioz limestone and is composed of a bastion and a 30 metre 100 ft 6 four storey tower Belem TowerTorre de Belem Torre de Sao VicenteThe quarter facade of the tower on the bank of the Tagus river38 41 30 N 9 12 58 W 38 69167 N 9 21611 W 38 69167 9 21611LocationLisbon PortugalDesignerFrancisco de ArrudaTypeFortificationMaterialLimestone lioz Visitors377 780 visitors 2022 1 Beginning datec 1514Completion date1519Websitewww wbr patrimoniocultural wbr gov wbr pt wbr pt wbr museus e monumentos wbr dgpc wbr m wbr torre de belem wbr UNESCO World Heritage SitePart ofMonastery of the Hieronymites and Tower of Belem in LisbonCriteriaCultural iii viReference263bisInscription1983 7th Session Portuguese National MonumentTypeNon movableCriteriaNational MonumentDesignated10 January 1907Reference no IPA 00004065Since 1983 the tower has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site along with the Jeronimos Monastery It is often portrayed as a symbol of Europe s Age of Discoveries 3 and as a metonym for Portugal or Lisbon given its landmark status It has incorrectly been stated that the tower was built in the middle of the Tagus and now sits near the shore because the river was redirected after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake In fact the tower was built on a small island in the Tagus river near the Lisbon shore 5 7 Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 2 1 Exterior 2 2 Interior 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp The tower was classified as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1983 and included in the registry of the Seven Wonders of Portugal in 2007 In the late 15th century King John II had designed a defence system for the mouth of the Tagus that depended on the fortresses of Cascais and Sao Sebastiao or Torre Velha in Caparica on the south side of the river 5 8 These fortresses did not completely protect the river s mouth and further protection was required 8 In his Chronicle of John II Chronica de D Joao II which appeared in 1545 9 the author Garcia de Resende affirmed the king s opinion that the defences of Lisbon were inadequate and that he had insisted on building fortifications along the entrance to the River Tagus to supplement the existing defences 10 To this end he ordered the making of a strong fort but died before any plans were drawn King Manuel I of Portugal revisited the proposal twenty years later and ordered the construction of a military fortification on the northern margin of the Tagus at Belem 8 In 1513 Lourenco Fernandes wrote a letter to his friends referring to the king s intention of constructing a tower near Restelo Velho having determined it to be essential nbsp Portuguese presence in India Bengal Gulf and Himalayas max extend between the 16th and 17th century The presence of this military element was also a celebration of the round trip of the Portuguese to India and a way of receiving the fleets that arrived at the mouth of the Tagus glorifying the feat as if it were a mimetic of what those who arrived could identify with the they had seen in the East The best example is the carved rhinoceros the result of an offer from an Indian ruler who offered it to King Dom Manuel This Rhinoceros would be the same one that Albert Durer would immortalize in his drawings The project was started on a basaltic rock outcrop a short distance from the riverbank using some of the stone being collected to build the Monastery of Santa Maria de Belem The tower was designed by military architect Francisco de Arruda 11 named Master of the works of the Belem stronghold by King Manuel 12 and in 1516 he began receiving 763 blocks and 504 stones for its construction delivered by Diogo Rodrigues treasurer for the project As construction progressed a man of war called the Grande Nau Great Ship a heavily armed 1000 ton ship continued to guard the estuary at the mouth of the Tagus until the fort s completion 13 14 The building was finished in 1519 just two years before Manuel s death and Gaspar de Paiva was temporarily stationed to command the fortress 15 his commission was made permanent on 15 September 1521 when he was appointed the first Captain General or alcalde and the fortress was named the Castle of St Vincent Castelo de Sao Vicente de Belem 10 16 in honour of the patron saint of Lisbon In 1571 Francisco de Holanda advised the monarch that it was necessary to improve the coastal defences in order to protect the kingdom s capital He suggested the construction of a strong and impregnable fort that could easily defend Lisbon and that the Belem Tower should be strengthened repaired and completed that it has cost so much without being completed D Holanda designed an improved rectangular bastion with several turrets In 1580 after a few hours of battle the garrison stationed in the tower surrendered to Spanish forces under the command of the Duke of Alba After this defeat the dungeons of the tower served as a prison until 1830 10 16 It was also during the last quarter of the 16th century that the construction of the Philippine Barracks began A rectangular two storey space was constructed over the bastion giving the tower the visual profile that it has retained to the present with sculpted crosses of the Order of Christ and domed turrets In 1589 Philip I of Portugal ordered Italian engineer Friar Joao Vicenzio Casale to build a well defended fort to be constructed in place of the useless castle of Sao Vicente 10 The engineer submitted three designs proposing that the bastion would be surrounded by another bastion of greater dimensions but the project never materialized A 1633 codex for the House of Cadaval was inserted into one of the floors in one of the arches of the barracks and in the four largest arches at the top of the southern facade Similarly a reference to the year 1655 was inscribed on a plaque placed on the northern wall of the cloister which certified the tower s function as a customs control point and for navigation along the Tagus vessels were obliged to pay a tax as they entered the harbour which was imposed incrementally Between 1780 and 1782 under the reign of Maria I of Portugal General Guilherme de Vallere constructed the Fort of Bom Sucesso whose battery was connected by a western corridor wall to the tower 10 When French forces invaded Lisbon during the Peninsular War detachments of their troops were quartered in the tower from 1808 to 1814 After the French retreated Lord Beresford advised that coastal artillery batteries should be reinforced along the Tagus and specifically noted that stronger batteries should be placed on the sides of the tower s bastion with carts placed to better protect the soldiers since the walls were very low nbsp French ships exchanging fire with the tower at the Battle of the Tagus during the Liberal Wars 1831 King Miguel I 1828 1834 used the dungeons to imprison his liberal opponents 6 while another level was used as a custom house for ships until the duty on foreign ships was abolished in 1833 10 16 17 The tower received military upgrades in 1589 and 1809 1814 During the reign of Maria II Almeida Garrett protested the site s degradation and under the persuasion of the Duke of Terceira renovations were begun by military engineer Antonio de Azevedo e Cunha 10 He demolished the Philippine barracks and extended revivalist elements in 1845 46 such as the armoured merlons the balustrade of the veranda along the southern facade the laced fascia in the cloister and the niche with an image of the Virgin and Child In 1865 67 a beacon was installed on the southeast terrace of the building and a telegraph service was started while nearby a gas factory was built producing smoke that prompted many protests 10 The first moves to preserve and rehabilitate the tower began in the latter part of the 20th century First the tower was transferred to the Ministry of Finance in 1940 which undertook small conservation works 10 Then the military quarters on the battlements were removed and the inner cloister was built The architectural landscape designer Antonio Viana Barreto began a three year project in 1953 to integrate the tower with the local shoreline 10 In 1983 the site hosted the 17th European Exhibition on Art Science and Culture and various projects involving the building were undertaken among them covering the cloister with a transparent plastic cupola In the same year the Belem Tower was classified by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site In the 1990s the property was transferred to the Instituto Portugues do Patrimonio Arquitectonico forerunner of IGESPAR which began a full restoration of the building that lasted from February 1997 to January 1998 this included reinforcing the tower and bastion reinforcing the south balcony supports with stainless steel rods and epoxy resin treating the mortar joints and general structural cleaning The statues of Saint Vincent of Saragossa and the Archangel Michael received the same treatment 18 In 1999 the project received the Europa Nostra award for its restoration of the exterior 14 The Belem Tower was added on 7 July 2007 to the registry of the Seven Wonders of Portugal Architecture editThe Belem Tower is situated on the northern bank of the Tagus River in the civil parish of Santa Maria de Belem municipality of Lisbon accessible at the western end of the Avenida de Brasilia by a small bridge Nearby are the Jeronimos Monastery to the east and the Forte do Bom Sucesso to the west while to the north are the tower Governor s residence the old Governor s residence for the Bom Successo fort and the Chapel of Sao Jeronimo The tower is isolated along the riverbank between the dock of Bom Sucesso and Pedroucos on a basaltic outcropping of rocks belonging to the geomorphological volcanic complex of Lisboa Mafra 19 Although various guides have claimed that the tower was built in the middle of the Tagus and now sits near the shore after the 1755 earthquake redirected the river they are incorrect The Portuguese Ministry of Culture and the Institute of Architectural Heritage indicate that the tower was constructed on a small island near the bank of the Tagus opposite the shore of Restelo As development extended the shoreline progressively more and more of the northern bank crept southwards into the Tagus the tower becoming integrated into the riverbank over time 5 7 20 The Belem Tower was built from a beige white limestone local to the Lisbon area and thereabouts called Lioz 21 The building is divided into two parts the bastion and the four story tower located on the north side of the bastion The 16th century tower is considered one of the principal works of the Portuguese Late Gothic Manueline style 4 20 This is especially apparent in its elaborate rib vaulting crosses of the Order of Christ armillary spheres and twisted rope common to the nautically inspired organic Manueline style 4 7 Exterior edit nbsp Bastion terrace with its Moorish bartizan turrets and cupolas from the northwest nbsp The inner cloister of the tower displaying the back side of the niche of the virgin and two turretsThe building s plan consists of a rectangular tower and an irregular hexagonal bastion with elongated flanks that projects south into the river It is basically a large articulated vertical space resting on a horizontal stone slab covered by masonry enclosures On the northeast angle of the structure protected by a defensive wall with bartizans is a drawbridge to access the bulwark decorated in plant motifs surmounted by the royal coat of arms and flanked by small columns complemented with armillary spheres The Manueline armillary spheres appear at the tower s entrance symbolizing Portugal s nautical explorations and were used on King Manuel I s personal banner to represent Portuguese discoveries during his rule 7 22 23 The decorative carved twisted rope and elegant knots also point to Portugal s nautical history and are common elements of the Manueline style 4 7 On the outside of the lower bastion the walls have spaces for 17 cannons with embrasures affording a view of the river 24 The upper tier of the bastion is crowned by a small wall with bartizans in strategic places decorated by rounded shields with the cross of the Order of Christ encircling the platform King Manuel I was a member of the Order of Christ 25 thus the cross of the Order of Christ is used numerous times on the parapets 3 7 These were a symbol of Manuel s military power as the knights of the Order of Christ participated in several military conquests in that era 25 The bartizans cylindrical turrets guerites in the corners that served as watchtowers have corbels with zoomorphic ornaments and domes covered with ridges unusual in European architecture topped with ornate finials The bases of the turrets have images of beasts including a rhinoceros 5 16 This rhinoceros is considered to be the first sculpture of such an animal in Western European art 5 and probably depicts the rhinoceros that Manuel I sent to Pope Leo X in 1515 26 While the tower is predominantly Manueline in style 4 it also incorporates features of other architectural styles 5 It was built by the military architect Francisco de Arruda who had already supervised the construction of several fortresses in Portuguese territories in Morocco 12 16 The influence of Moorish architecture is manifested in the delicate decorations the arched windows the balconies and the ribbed cupolas of the watchtowers 3 The tower has four storeys with fenestrations and battlements the ground floor being occupied by a vaulted cistern On the first floor there is a south facing rectangular door with arched windows on the east and north and bartizans in the northeast and northwest corners The southern part of the second floor is dominated by a covered veranda with a loggia matacaes consisting of an arcade of seven arches resting on large corbels with balusters It is covered by laced stonework to form a porch and its sloped roof ends in a sculpted twisted rope 6 The eastern northern and western walls are occupied by double arched enclosures with the northeast and northwest corners occupied by statues of Saint Vincent of Saragossa and the archangel Michael in niches The third floor has twin windows in the northern eastern and western facades with balusters interspersed by two armillary spheres and large relief with the Royal coat of arms The final floor is encircled by a terrace with shields of the Order of Christ and a northern arched door and eastern arched window The terrace is enclosed by a low wall with colonnaded pyramidal merlons with bartizans in the four corners A similar terrace above this floor offers a view of the surrounding landscape 27 28 Interior edit nbsp Interior casemate of the main bastion showing the cannon niches nbsp A view from the second floor loggia nbsp Tourists visiting insideThe interior of the bastion with a circular staircase at the north end has two contiguous halls with vaulted ceilings supported by masonry arches as well as four storage lockers and sanitary facilities On the ground floor bunker the floor is inclined towards the outside while the ceilings are supported by masonry pilasters and vaulted spines Gothic rib vaulting is evident in this casemate 29 the rooms of the tower 30 and the cupolas of the watchtowers on the bastion terrace 3 Peripheral compartments on the edges of the bunker allow the individual cannons to occupy their own space with the ceiling designed with several asymmetrical domes of various heights The ancillary storerooms were later used as prison cells 31 Two archways open to the main cloister in the north and south while six broken arches stretch along the eastern and western parts of the cloister interspersed with square pillars in the bastion interior with gargoyle facets The open cloister above the casemate although decorative was designed to dispel cannon smoke 16 29 The upper level is connected by a railing decorated with crosses of the Order of Christ while at the terrace the space has rising columns topped with armillary spheres This space could also be used for light calibre infantry This was the first Portuguese fortification with a two level gun emplacement and marks a new development in military architecture Some of the decoration dates from the renovation of the 1840s and is Neo Manueline in style like the decoration of the small cloister on the bastion 16 On the southern portion of the cloister terrace is an image of the Virgin and Child The statue of the Virgin of Belem also referred to as Nossa Senhora de Bom Successo Our Lady of Good Success Nossa Senhora das Uvas Our Lady of the Grapes or the Virgem da Boa Viagem Virgin of Safe Homecoming is depicted holding a child in her right hand and a bunch of grapes in her left The tower is about 12 metres 39 ft wide and 30 metres 98 ft tall 6 The first floor interior contains the Sala do Governador Governor s Hall an octagonal space that opens into the cistern while in the northeast and northwest corners are corridors that link to the bartizans A small door provides access via a spiral staircase to the subsequent floors On the second floor the Sala dos Reis King s Hall opens to the loggia overlooking the river while a small corner fireplace extends from this floor to the third floor fireplace in the Sala das Audiencias Audience Hall The ceilings of all three floors are covered in hollow concrete slabs The fourth floor chapel has a vaulted rib ceiling with niches emblematic of the Manueline style supported by carved corbels References edit Sofia 2023 Casa Yes Consultado em 04 de outubro de 2023 The Dock and Harbour Authority Foxlow Publications Limited 1969 p 335 a b c d e UNESCO Monastery of the Hieronymites and Tower of Belem in Lisbon United Nations Retrieved 7 December 2009 a b c d e Donald F Lach 1994 Asia in the making of Europe University of Chicago Press pp 57 64 ISBN 0 226 46730 9 a b c d e f g Turismo de Portugal Portugal Tourism Torre de Belem Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 7 December 2009 a b c d Walter Crum Watson 1908 Portuguese architecture A Constable amp Co Ltd pp 181 182 Retrieved 14 December 2009 a b c d e f IGESPAR Instituto de Gestao do Patrimonio Arquitectonico e Arqueologico Portuguese Institute of Architectural and Archaeological Heritage 2006 World Heritage Jeronimos and Tower of Belem Archived from the original on 7 November 2010 Retrieved 8 December 2009 a b c IGESPAR Instituto de Gestao do Patrimonio Arquitectonico e Arqueologico ed 2011 A Torre de Sao Vicente XVIII in Portuguese Lisbon Archived from the original on 2 August 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2011 Elisabeth Feist Hirsch 31 July 1967 Damiao de Gois The Life and Thought of a Portuguese Humanist 1502 1574 Springer Science amp Business Media p 197 ISBN 978 90 247 0195 7 a b c d e f g h i j IGESPAR Instituto de Gestao do Patrimonio Arquitectonico e Arqueologico ed 2011 Cronologia in Portuguese Lisbon Archived from the original on 2 August 2016 Retrieved 16 July 2011 Colum Hourihane 2012 The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture Oxford University Press p 277 ISBN 978 0 19 539536 5 a b Justino Mendes de Almeida 1992 De Olisipo a Lisboa estudos olisiponenses Edicoes Cosmos pp 45 46 ISBN 978 972 9170 75 1 Tower of Belem World Monuments Fund Retrieved 7 April 2010 a b IPPAR Instituto Portugues do Patrimonio Arquitectonico Portuguese Institute of Architectural Heritage 2006 IPPAR Services Belem Tower Archived from the original on 20 December 2009 Retrieved 9 December 2009 Paiva was the brother of King Manuel s tutor a b c d e f g Ministry of Culture 2000 History Introduction Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 7 December 2009 Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Great Britain 1835 The Penny cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge C Knight p 172 Ministry of Culture 2000 Conservation and Restoration Restoration works timetable Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 14 December 2009 Joao Pais 6 October 2011 The Paleogene and Neogene of Western Iberia Portugal A Cenozoic record in the European Atlantic domain Springer Science amp Business Media p 35 ISBN 978 3 642 22401 0 a b Mark Ellingham John Fisher Graham Kenyon 2002 The Rough Guide to Portugal 10th ed Rough Guides Ltd p 97 ISBN 1 85828 877 0 Figueiredo Aires Barros Basto Graca Mauricio 2007 R Prikryl ed Building Stone Decay From Diagnosis to Conservation B J Smith Geological Society of London p 99 ISBN 978 1 86239 218 2 Instituto Camoes 2005 The Star of Cabral Retrieved 8 December 2009 Martins Antonio Bandeiras navais historicas Bandeiras de Portugal in Portuguese Bandeiras do Bacano Archived from the original on 23 February 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2007 DK Publishing 2012 Great Buildings DK Publishing p 113 ISBN 978 1 4654 0774 0 a b Order of the Knights of Christ Catholic Encyclopedia Wikisource The Free Library 1913 Retrieved 8 December 2009 L C Rookmaaker Marvin L Jones Heinz Georg Klos Richard J Reynolds III 1998 The Rhinoceros in Captivity A List of 2439 Rhinoceroses Kept from Roman Times to 1994 Kugler Publications p 80 ISBN 978 90 5103 134 8 Mary Ann Sullivan 2005 Belem Tower Torre de Belem Retrieved 8 December 2009 Ministry of Culture 2000 Tower Terrace Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 8 December 2009 a b Ministry of Culture 2000 Bulwark Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 7 December 2009 Ministry of Culture 2000 Chapel Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 7 December 2009 Ministry of Culture 2000 Bulwark terrace Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 7 December 2009 Sources editTurner J 1996 Grove Dictionary of Art Macmillan Publishers Ltd ISBN 1 884446 00 0 Hancock Matthew 2003 The Rough Guide to Lisbon London Rough Guides Ltd ISBN 1 85828 906 8 Weimer Alois Weimer Langer Britta 2000 Portugal Basingstoke England GeoCenter International Ltd ISBN 3 8297 6110 4 Holanda Francisco de 1986 1571 Da Fabrica que Falece a Cidade de Lisboa in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Resende Garcia de 1622 Cronica dos Valerosos e Insignes Feitos del Rei D Joao II in Portuguese Lisbon p 115 A Torre de Belem Seroes in Portuguese Lisbon 1909 pp 419 426 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Santos Reynaldo dos 1922 A Torre de Belem in Portuguese Coimbra Portugal a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Silva Augusto Vieira da 1928 Torre de Belem Projectos de Remodelacao no sec XVI Revista de Arqueologia e Historia in Portuguese vol 6 Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sanches Jose Dias 1929 Apontamentos e Croquis a Pena Sobre o Mosteiro dos Jeronimos e Torre de Belem in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Sanches Jose Dias 1940 Belem e Arredores Atraves dos Tempos in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Costa Americo 1932 Torre de Belem Dicionario Corografico de Portugal Continental e Insular vol 3 Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Nunes J de Sousa 1932 A Torre de S Vicente a Par de Belem in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Nunes J de Sousa 1959 A Torre de Belem in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Araujo Norberto de 1944 Inventario de Lisboa in Portuguese fasc 1 ed Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Chico Mario Tavares 1948 A Arquitectura em Portugal na Epoca de D Manuel e nos Principios do Reinado de D Joao III O Gotico Final Portugues o Estilo Manuelino e a Introducao da Arte do Renascimento in Portuguese Porto Portugal a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ribeiro Mario de Sampaio Ribeiro 1954 A Torre e a Fortaleza de Belem Separata dos Anais in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Ministerio das Obras Publicas ed 1960 Relatorio da Actividade do Ministerio nos Anos de 1959 in Portuguese vol 1 Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Goncalves A Nogueira 1964 A Torre Baluarte de Belem Sep da Rev Ocidente in Portuguese vol 67 Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Nunes Antonio Lopes Pires 1984 As Fortalezas de Transicao nos Cartografos do sec XVI Livro do Congresso Segundo Congresso sobre Monumentos Militares Portugueses in Portuguese Lisbon pp 54 66 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dias Pedro 1986 Os Antecedentes da Arquitectura Manuelina in Historia da Arte em Portugal in Portuguese vol 5 Lisbon pp 9 91 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Dias Pedro 1988 A Arquitectura Manuelina in Portuguese Porto Portugal a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Neu Joao B M 1994 Em Volta da Torre de Belem Evolucao da Zona Ocidental de Lisboa in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moreira Rafael 1994 Torre de Belem O Livro de Lisboa in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link IPPAR ed 2000 Torre de Belem Intervencao de Conservacao Exterior in Portuguese Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Aires barros Luis April 2001 As Rochas dos Monumentos Portugueses Tipologias e Patologias in Portuguese vol 2 Lisbon a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Torre de Belem Official website The Tower of Belem on Google Arts amp Culture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Belem Tower amp oldid 1204680494, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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