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Wikipedia

Braga

Braga (/ˈbrɑːɡə/ BRAH-gə, Portuguese: [ˈbɾaɣɐ] (listen); Proto-Celtic: *Bracara) is a city and a municipality, capital of the northwestern Portuguese district of Braga and of the historical and cultural Minho Province. Braga Municipality had a resident population of 193,333 inhabitants (in 2021),[1] representing the seventh largest municipality in Portugal by population. Its area is 183.40 km2.[2] Its agglomerated urban area extends to the Cávado River and is the third most populated urban area in Portugal, behind Lisbon and Porto Metropolitan Areas.

Braga
Coordinates: 41°33′4″N 8°25′42″W / 41.55111°N 8.42833°W / 41.55111; -8.42833
Country Portugal
RegionNorte
Intermunic. comm.Cávado
DistrictBraga
Parishes37, see text
Government
 • PresidentRicardo Rio (PSD)
Area
 • Total183.40 km2 (70.81 sq mi)
Elevation
200 m (700 ft)
Highest elevation
558 m (1,831 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total193,333
 • Density1,100/km2 (2,700/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC±00:00 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+01:00 (WEST)
Postal code
470x
Area code253
Websitewww.cm-braga.pt

It is host to the oldest Portuguese archdiocese, the Archdiocese of Braga of the Catholic Church and it is the seat of the Primacy of the Spains. During the Roman Empire, then known as Bracara Augusta, the settlement was the capital of the province of Gallaecia and later of the Kingdom of the Suebi that was one of the first to separate from the Roman Empire. Inside of the city there is also a castle tower that can be visited. Nowadays, Braga is a major hub for inland Northern Portugal and it is an important stop on the Portuguese Way path of the Road of St James. The city was also the European Youth Capital in 2012.[3]

History

 
A 16th-century map of Braga, when the city was enclosed by its mediaeval wall. The large building in the centre is the Cathedral, while the Episcopal Palace and courtyards can be seen above the cathedral and the ancient Castle of Braga
 
The 18th century municipal hall that houses the local government authority
 
The skyline of Braga during the mid-19th century.

Pre-Roman

Human occupation of the region of Braga dates back thousands of years, documented by vestiges of monumental structures starting in the Megalithic era. During the Iron Age, the Castro culture extended into the northwest, characterized by Bracari peoples who occupied the high ground in strategically located fortified settlements (castrum).

The region became the domain of the Callaici Bracarii, a Celtic[4] tribe who occupied what is now northern Portugal, Galicia and Asturias in the northwest of Iberia.

Roman rule

The Romans began their conquest of the region around 136 BC, and finished it, by conquering the northern regions, during the reign of Emperor Augustus. The civitas of Bracara Augusta was founded in 16 BC; in the context of the administrative reorganization of these Roman acquisitions, Bracara was rededicated to the Emperor taking on the name Bracara Augusta. The city of Bracara Augusta developed greatly during the 1st century and reached its maximum extension around the 2nd century.

Towards the end of the 3rd century, the Emperor Diocletian promoted the city to the status of capital of the administrative area Conventus bracarensis, the southwestern area of the newly founded Roman province of Gallaecia.

Braga in Late Antiquity and Middle Ages

 

The city was described as prosperous by the poet Ausonius, in the 4th century.[5] Between 402 and 470 the Germanic Invasions of the Iberian Peninsula occurred, and the area was conquered by the Suebi, a Germanic people from Central Europe. According to records the city was protected by a wall, still in use since the 3rd century, and the old Roman ampitheatre was repurposed into a fortress.[5] In 410, the Suebi established a Kingdom in northwest Iberia covering what is present-day's Northern half of Portugal,[6] Galicia and Asturias, which they maintained as Gallaecia, and had Bracara as their capital. This kingdom was founded by Hermeric and lasted for over 150 years. However, the departure of the Vandals and the arrival of the Visigoths brought a new instability to the region. Between 419 and 422, Braga was threatened by the Vandals so it prepared itself for a siege, closed its gates and refused to open them; this led to the destruction of the surrounding countryside.[5] Nevertheless, between 429 and 455, the Suebi made a military comeback in Iberia reinforcing their hold in Galeicia and Lusitania.[5] In 455, while the Visigothic king Theodoric II sacked Braga, utterly destroying many historical and archaeological records,[5] the Suebi king Rechiar escaped the city, wounded, to Porto.[7] However, records of a list of dioceses and parishes of Braga, made in 570 still exist.[5] By about 584, the Visigoths took permanent control of Gallaecia from the Suebi, and Braga was made a provincial capital.

Because historians are still unsure of the dating of the Chapel of São Pedro de Balsemão, in Lamego, currently Braga hosts the oldest chapel in Portugal, the Chapel of São Frutuoso. The chapel was built by the Visigoths on top of a Roman temple to Asclepius and it was made to be a Royal Chapel. In 656 AD, it was consecrated by Saint Fructuosus[5] to be used as his tomb.

 
A 17th-century engraving of Braga, showing the walls of the city, which were progressively demolished to make way for new constructions
 
A view of Rua Júlio Lima at the beginning of the 20th century

Historical records show, so far, that the first known bishop of Braga was named Paternus,[5] who famously renounced priscillianism at the First Council of Toledo, in September of 400 AD. We also have records of a bishop named Balconius (415-447), who was also recorded to be present when the Iberian clergy received, in 435, a German priest from Arabia accompanied by several Greeks with news from the Council of Ephesus (431).[5] Balconius was also a contemporary and correspondent of Pope Leo I.[5]

Tradition, however, states that Saint Peter of Rates was the first bishop of Braga, a Jew personally elevated to the role by Saint James. Another bishop, Saint Ovidius (d. 135 AD) is also sometimes considered one of the first bishops of this city.

Braga had an important role in the Christianization of the Iberian Peninsula. In the early 5th century, Paulus Orosius (a friend of Augustine of Hippo) wrote several theological works that expounded the Christian faith. While thanks to the work of Saint Martin of Braga the Suebi in Iberia renounced the Arian and Priscillianist heresies during two synods held here in the 6th century.[5] It is also worth noting that Rechiar, the suebi king, was also the first Germanic king in Europe to convert to Chalcedonian Christianism, predating Clovis of the Franks.[8] At the time, Martin also founded an important monastery in Dumio (Dume), and it was in Braga that the Archbishopric of Braga held their councils. There were also some attempts at further elevating the religious status of the city, such as Paulus Orosius and Avitus of Braga's attempt at bringing relics of Saint Stephen, from the Holy Land to Braga. Originally, Avitus entrusted the delivery of the relics to Paulus Orosius, however, after arriving at Majorca, the theologian heard news of the invasion of the peninsula by the Vandals and halted his pilgrimage to return to North Africa. The relics never reached their destination and their fates are unknown.[9]

As a consequence, the Archbishops of Braga later claimed the title of Primatus Totus Hispania, claiming supremacy over the entire Hispanic church. Yet, their authority was never accepted throughout Hispania, and today they only retain the title of Primate of Portugal. The bishop Balconius, who was later elevated to become the first Archbishop of Braga, and according to later sources, was also the first to be given said title.[10][11]

The transition from Visigothic reigns to the Muslim conquest of Iberia was very obscure, representing a period of decline for the city. The Moors briefly captured Braga in 714-716, but were repelled by Christian forces under Alfonso I of Asturias in 773 [12], (alongside Chaves, Porto and Lamego), with intermittent attacks until 868 when they were definitively ousted by Alfonso III of Asturias. The bishopric was restored in 1070 and elevated to new heights. The first new Archbishop, Peter of Braga (?-1096), immediately started rebuilding the Cathedral (which was modified many times during the following centuries). According to historical records and oral tradition, the Archbishop Diego Gelmírez of Santiago de Compostela, fearing the rise of the Cathedral of Braga, stole the relics of Braga's saints in an attempt to diminish the religious importance of the city.[11] The relics only returned to Braga in the 1990s.

When, after his death, Alfonso III the Great of the Kingdom of Asturias divided his kingdom among his sons in 908, he assigned the Kingdom of Galicia to Ordoño of Galicia, who established his capital in Braga.[13] Between 1093 and 1147, Braga became the residential seat of the Portuguese court. In the early 12th century, Count Henry of Portugal and bishop Geraldo de Moissac reclaimed the archbishopric seat for Braga, with power over a large area in Iberia. The medieval city developed around the cathedral, with the maximum authority in the city retained by the archbishop.

Braga in the Kingdom of Portugal

Braga as the main center of Christianity in Iberia, during the Reconquista (until the emergence of Santiago de Compostela and, later, the conquest of Toledo from the Muslims, in 1085), held a prominent stage in medieval politics, being a major contributor to the Independence of Portugal with the intervention of the Archbishop D. Paio Mendes in the Vatican, with Pope Alexander III, which lead to the promulgation of the Bula Manifestis Probatum, in 1179, recognizing Portugal as an independent Kingdom under D. Afonso I Henriques. It is traditionally told that the future king was baptized by Saint Gerald of Braga, although the exact location is still being debated.[14] Because of this support for D. Afonso Henriques, the new king gave large privileges to the city of Braga handing it over to direct control of the Church, basically making it a personal fiefdom of the Archbishop. This legal particularism continued all throughout history until the instauration of the Republic giving the city and its surrounding area the nickname of "Paiz Bracarense" (roughly translated as "Country of Braga").[15]

In the 16th century, due to its distance from the coast and provincial status, Braga did not profit from the adventures associated with the Age of Portuguese Discoveries (which favoured cities like Lisbon, Évora and Coimbra, new seats for the Portuguese court). Yet, Archbishop Diogo de Sousa, who sponsored several urban improvements in the city, including the enlargement of streets, the creation of public squares and the foundation of hospitals and new churches, managed to modernize the community. He expanded and remodelled the cathedral by adding a new chapel in the Manueline style, and generally turning the mediaeval town into a Renaissance city.

A similar period of rejuvenation occurred during the 18th century, when the archbishops of the House of Braganza contracted architects like André Soares and Carlos Amarante, to modernize and rejuvenate the city; they began a series of architectural transformations to churches and civic institutions in the Baroque style, including the municipal hall, public library, the Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte and many urban palaces. D. Luís de Sousa was another main archbishop who, with other merits, ordered the Church of the Parish of Saint Victor to be rebuilt, ordered the Campo de S. Ana to be enlarged, to rebuild the Church of S. Vicente, to requalify the Chapel of S. Sebastian and the construction of the Igreja dos Congregados which would later be monumentalized into the current version of the Basilica of the Congregados. Likewise, under the auspices of this diplomatic archbishop, the canon of the Braga Chapter, João Meira Carrilho, ordered the construction of the Chapel of the Congregation of the Oratory that existed within the Campo de S. Ana (modern day Avenida Central).[16] The old fortress built on top of the Roman ampitheatre still stood in the 18th century (a description of it was made during the reign of Queen D. Maria I), in the southern part of Maximinos,[5] but in search of the Roman foundations it was eventually torn down and it is now an archaeological site.

In 1758, Braga, like many other places, was included in the census requested by the monarchy, under the 1st Marquis of Pombal. These records are known as the Parochial Memories (Memórias Paroquiais) which can be consulted through various sources.[17]

In March 1809 it was the scene of the Battle of Braga, when French troops under Marshal Soult took the town from its Portuguese garrison. With the invasion of French troops, during the Peninsular Wars the city was relegated, once again, to a provincial status. But, by the second half of that century, with influence from Portuguese immigrants living in Brazil, new money and tastes resulted in improvements to architecture and infrastructures.

Republic

In the 20th century Braga faced similar periods of growth and decline; demographic and urban pressures, from urban-to-rural migration meant that the city's infrastructures had to be improved in order to satisfy greater demands.

Geography

Physical geography

 
Snow in Braga. Picture: Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte

Situated in the heart of Minho, Braga is located in a transitional region between the east and west: between mountains, forests, grand valleys, plains and fields, constructing natural spaces, moulded by human intervention. Geographically, with an area of 184 square kilometres (71 sq mi) it is bordered in the north by the municipalities of Vila Verde and Amares, northeast and east by Póvoa de Lanhoso, south and southeast with Guimarães and Vila Nova de Famalicão and west by the municipality of Barcelos.[18]

The topography in the municipality is characterized by irregular valleys, interspersed by mountainous spaces, fed by rivers running in parallel with the principal rivers. In the north it is limited by the Cávado River, in the south by terrain of the Serra dos Picos to a height of 566 metres (1,857 ft) and towards the east by the Serra dos Carvalhos to a height of 479 metres (1,572 ft), opening to the municipalities of Vila Nova de Famalicão and Barcelos. The territory extends from the northeast to southwest, accompanying the valleys of the two rivers, fed by many of its tributaries, forming small platforms between 20 metres (66 ft) and 570 metres (1,870 ft).

The municipality lies between 20 metres (66 ft) and 572 metres (1,877 ft), with the urbanized centre located at approximately 215 metres (705 ft). In the north, where the municipality is marked by the Cavado, the terrain is semi-planar, the east is mountainous owing to the Serra do Carvalho 479 metres (1,572 ft), Serra dos Picos 566 metres (1,857 ft), Monte do Sameiro 572 metres (1,877 ft) and Monte de Santa Marta 562 metres (1,844 ft). Between the Serra do Carvalho and Serra dos Picos is the River Este, forming the valley of Vale d’Este. Similarly, between the Serra dos Picos and Monte do Sameiro exists the plateau of Sobreposta-Pedralva. To the south and west, the terrain is a mix of mountains, plateaus and medium-size valleys, permitting the passage of the River Este, and giving birth to other confluences including the River Veiga, River Labriosca and various ravines.

Climate

Braga has a warm-summer Mediterranean climate similar to other cities in the northwest Iberian Peninsula except for having significantly hotter summer temperatures due to being some distance from the ocean: the absolute maximum is as much as 5 °C (9 °F) higher than neighbouring A Coruña or Santiago de Compostela. The highest and lowest recorded temperatures are 42.2 °C (108.0 °F) and −6.3 °C (20.7 °F) respectively. The climate is affected by the Atlantic Ocean which influences westerly winds that are channeled through the region's valleys, transporting large humid air masses. Consequently, the climate tends to be pleasant with clearly defined seasons. The air masses have the effect of maintaining morning relative humidity around 80%: annual mean temperatures hover between 12.5 °C (54.5 °F) and 17.5 °C (63.5 °F). Owing to nocturnal cooling, frost usually forms frequently between three and four months of the year (about 30 days of frost annually), and annually the region receives 1,449 millimetres (57.0 in) of precipitation, with the major intensity occurring between fall/winter and spring.

Climate data for Braga, 1981–2010 normals, extremes 1941–2006, altitude: 190 m (620 ft)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 24.0
(75.2)
23.5
(74.3)
29.5
(85.1)
31.0
(87.8)
35.5
(95.9)
38.5
(101.3)
38.5
(101.3)
42.2
(108.0)
38.5
(101.3)
33.3
(91.9)
28.5
(83.3)
24.1
(75.4)
42.2
(108.0)
Average high °C (°F) 13.7
(56.7)
14.8
(58.6)
17.6
(63.7)
18.3
(64.9)
21.1
(70.0)
25.4
(77.7)
27.8
(82.0)
28.0
(82.4)
25.5
(77.9)
20.9
(69.6)
16.8
(62.2)
14.4
(57.9)
20.3
(68.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 9.0
(48.2)
9.9
(49.8)
12.3
(54.1)
13.2
(55.8)
15.8
(60.4)
19.5
(67.1)
21.4
(70.5)
21.4
(70.5)
19.4
(66.9)
15.9
(60.6)
12.3
(54.1)
10.2
(50.4)
15.0
(59.0)
Average low °C (°F) 4.3
(39.7)
4.9
(40.8)
7.0
(44.6)
7.9
(46.2)
10.4
(50.7)
13.5
(56.3)
14.9
(58.8)
14.7
(58.5)
13.2
(55.8)
10.8
(51.4)
7.7
(45.9)
6.0
(42.8)
9.6
(49.3)
Record low °C (°F) −6.3
(20.7)
−4.5
(23.9)
−5.0
(23.0)
−1.2
(29.8)
−0.5
(31.1)
3.3
(37.9)
7.5
(45.5)
6.7
(44.1)
3.8
(38.8)
2.5
(36.5)
−1.7
(28.9)
−2.5
(27.5)
−6.3
(20.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 176.4
(6.94)
114.8
(4.52)
121.6
(4.79)
130.8
(5.15)
112.9
(4.44)
48.6
(1.91)
22.0
(0.87)
34.0
(1.34)
81.7
(3.22)
191.7
(7.55)
193.9
(7.63)
220.2
(8.67)
1,448.6
(57.03)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 14.8 13.5 12.2 13.5 13.4 8.2 5.4 4.7 7.4 12.7 13.1 15.5 134.4
Source: Instituto de Meteorologia[19]

Human geography

 
Panorama of Braga, as seen from the Picoto hill
 
A similar panorama taken from the Este River valley
 
Distribution of civil parishes in the municipality of Braga
Population of the
municipality of Braga
(1849–2004)
YearPop.±%
1849 40,004—    
1900 58,339+45.8%
1911 60,836+4.3%
1920 57,019−6.3%
1930 60,761+6.6%
1940 75,846+24.8%
1950 84,142+10.9%
1960 92,938+10.5%
1970 96,220+3.5%
1981 125,472+30.4%
1991 141,256+12.6%
2001 164,192+16.2%
2011 181,474+10.5%
2021 193,333+6.5%

The municipality is densely populated, with approximately 962 inhabitants per square kilometre, equivalent to 181,474 residents (2011); it is one of the more populous territories in Portugal, as well as one of the "younger" markets.[20] The majority of the population concentrates in the urban area of Braga, itself, where densities are more than 10000 per square kilometre.

The Bracarense population consists of approximately 78954 male and 85238 female individuals, with 35% of the population less than 25 years of age, while seniors conform to 11% of the population; the working population of the municipality occupies 54% of this structure.[20] Although largely native Portuguese, other segments of the population include Brazilians, Africans (principally from the former Portuguese colonies), Chinese and eastern European peoples, namely Ukrainians.[20]

 
Beach in Cávado River, Braga

The urban structure includes approximately 70,268 residences (2001), even as the typical classic representation of family only includes 51,173 members in the municipality.[20] The "extra" homes are primarily temporary residences, normally for students, migrant workers and professionals working in the city. There is, also, a great number of homes owned by Portuguese residents living overseas (who use the homes periodically while in Portugal) even as constant and development has attracted new growth in the population.[20] Further, the difference in resident to transitory population means that, on average, the population of Braga hovers between 174,000 and 230,000 individuals annually.[20]

Growth in the population, roughly 16.2% between 1991 and 2001, occurred mainly in the older suburban civil parishes, such as Nogueira (now abolished) (124.6%), Frossos (now abolished) (68.4%), Real (now abolished) (59.8%) and Lamaçães (now abolished) (50.9%).[20][21]

Civil parishes

Administratively, the municipality is divided into 37 civil parishes (freguesias):[22]


There is no formal city government, only municipal government authority, with local administration handled by the individual juntas de freguesia or civil parish councils.

Economy

The major industries in the municipality are construction, metallurgy and mechanics, electrical and electronic equipment, software development and web design. The computer industry is significant. Braga hosts PRIMAVERA – Business Software Solutions SA (PRIMAVERA BSS) company headquarters,[23][24] a Portuguese multinational software company best known for its leading enterprise project management software. The INL - International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory, a joint research center in nanotechnology established and funded by both the Portuguese and the Spanish governments, is also headquartered in Braga. The automotive industry has a long history in Braga. Aptiv operates a technical center for the development and production of automotive infotainment systems.[25] This plant was previously owned by Grundig. Next to Aptiv, Robert Bosch GmbH operates a similar technical center, mainly for branches of infotainment and sensors. This plant was previously founded by Blaupunkt. Bosch has been working closely with the University of Minho in Portugal since 2012, producing one of the country's largest university-corporate partnerships. In the process, many projects for the mobility of the future are being tackled. In 2018, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Portuguese Prime Minister António Costa were on site for the launch of a new technology campus.[26] The university, headquartered in Braga, is also by itself a major driving force of the city's economy.

Transport

The municipality has a small-sized airfield (Aerodromo de Braga) in Palmeira. The major international airport used by the people of Braga is the Sá Carneiro International Airport (also known as Porto Airport) located 50 kilometres (31 mi) away, in Porto Metropolitan Area. Access to the international airport located near Porto is made by public transit fom Braga city centre (roughly 40 minutes) or aerobus (50 minutes).

Braga is serviced by both regional and high-speed rail connection to major urban centres in the country and abroad.

It has an efficient bus network (TUB - Transportes Urbanos de Braga) with 76 lines in the urban area and over a 300 km network.

Architecture

 
The remains of the historic keep of the Castle of Braga, a defensive structure that circled the old town
 
The Chapel of the Coimbras, one of the first Manueline era chapels in Braga


 
The Arch of Rua Souto, commonly referred as the Arco da Porta Nova, an 18th-century ceremonial arch

The region of Braga is scattered with Neolithic, Roman, Medieval and Modernist monuments, buildings and structures attracting tourists. Although there are many examples of these structures, only the following have been classified by the Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico as National Monuments:

Archaeological

 
Roman milestone XXIX on Via Romana XVIII – the road linking the Iberian cities of Bracara Augusta and Asturica Augusta
  • Castro of São Mamede (Castro de Monte Redondo/Castro Monte Cossourado/Castro de São Mamede)
  • Roman milestones, several Roman-era granite markers currently on display at the Museum D. Diogo de Sousa, dating from AD 41 to 238, that is, the reigns of Emperor Claudius to Maximinus II.[27]
  • Roman Thermae of Maximinus (Portuguese: Termas romanas de Maximinos/Alto da Cividade/Colina dos Maximinos), discovered in the 20th century, the thermae occupy 800 square metres (8,600 sq ft), in the civil parish of Braga (Maximinos, Sé e Cividade), and were constructed in the 1st to late 3rd century;[28]

Civic

  • Arch of Porta Nova/Rua de Souto (Arco da Porta Nova/Arco da Rua do Souto), a Baroque and Neoclassical arch, designed by André Soares in the late 18th century, and decorates the western gate of a medieval wall. It was opened in 1512 and since has been traditionally used to present to promote to visiting dignitaries and celebrities.[29]
  • Palace of the Falcões (Portuguese: Palácio dos Falcões/Governo Civil de Braga), a Baroque-era palace originally commissioned by Francisco de Meira Carrilho on 23 July 1703, and later, upon successive renovations, used by the Civil Governor's residence;
  • Fountain of the Idol (Portuguese: Fonte do Ídolo), the 1st century Roman fountain dedicated to an indigenous god, located in the central civil parish of Braga (São José de São Lázaro e São João do Souto);
  • Fountain of the Iron Waters (Portuguese: Fonte das Águas Férreas), following the discovery in July 1173 of iron-rich springs in the parish of Fraião, Archbishop Gaspar de Bragança ordered the municipal council to begin the canalization of these waters for public use, giving rise to a series of fountains, such as the Baroque decorated main fountain;
  • Hospital of São Marcos (Portuguese: Hospital de São Marcos), with a façade comparable to any religious monument in the city, the Hospital of São Marcos, is an example of the complex Baroque style of Carlos Amarante, featuring ornate double belfry and accents;
  • Pillory of Braga (Portuguese: Pelourinho de Braga), the 15th century pillory, that marks municipal authority for the town, was constructed, demolished and moved various times, before being relocated on the grounds of the Sé Cathedral;[30]
  • Palace of Raio (Portuguese: Palácio de Raio), an 18th-century Baroque-Rococo urban residence, with richly decorated blue azulejo façade of Andre Soares;
  • Residence of the Crivos (Portuguese: Casas das Gelosias/Casa dos Crivos), a Renaissance-era shop-residence constructed outside the old walls characteristic of late Renaissance architecture and one of the few examples of a building covered in wood-lattice façade from this period.
  • Seven Sources Aqueduct (Portuguese: Sete Fontes), a complex network of aqueducts that provided potable water to citizenry of Braga;
  • Theatro Circo (Portuguese: Teatro Circo de Braga), 20th century revivalist theatre, known for its architecture, as much for the films, theatre plays and performances;
  • Bridge of Prado (Ponte do Prado)
  • Bridge of Prozelo (Ponte de Prozelo/Ponte do Porto)

Military

  • Tower of Santiago (Portuguese: Torre de Santiago e troço das antigas muralhas de Braga), part of the ancient walls of Braga, the Tower of Santiago was designed by Portuguese Baroque master André Soares, based on a mixture of Gothic, Baroque and Rococo elements;
  • Tower of Castle of Braga (Castelo de Braga), actually the remnants of the castle's keep, constructed during the reign of King Denis of Portugal, which was part of the defensive system of the city of Braga, and included a semi-circular walled enclosure centred on the Sé Cathedral.[31]

Religious

 
The sculpted black rock of the Sé Cathedral of Braga: seat of the Archbishop of Braga and Primate of Portugal and of the Hispanias.
 
The simple Romanesque façade of the Church of São Paulo
 
The Pópulo Church, that includes convent, dependencies and cloister
 
The Church of Santa Cruz courtesy the Irmandade de Santa Cruz
  • Archiepiscopal Palace of Braga (Portuguese: Antigo Paço Arquiepiscopal de Braga), between the 14th–18th centuries, a religious residence, but after the 20th century, the home of the municipal offices, public library and archive;
  • Chapel of the Espírito Santo (Portuguese: Capela do Espírito Santo), an example of mixed styles, the chapel includes elements of Baroque, Neoclassical and Manerist eras;
  • Chapel of Nossa Senhora da Consolaçã (Portuguese: Capela de Nossa Senhora da Consolação), a simple single-nave chapel constructed in the Baroque-style
  • Chapel of São Bento (Portuguese: Capela de São Bento), constructed in the middle of the 18th century, the chapel was blessed by Archbishop José of Bragança in 1755;
  • Chapel of Senhor do Bom Sucesso (Portuguese: Capela do Senhor do Bom Sucesso), a Baroque and Neoclassical chapel, is highlighted by a main façade, typical of André Soares, but constructed by Carlos Amarante, at the beginning of his career, who timidly applied Neoclassical decorative elements;
  • Chapel of the Coimbras (Capela de Nossa Senhora da Conceição/Capela dos Coimbras/Capela do Senhor Morto), a Manueline chapel, probably designed by Castillian architect Filipe Odarte, with sculptures attributed to Hodart, an altar by João de Ruão and posterior tomb sculptures by the same artist.[32]
  • Church of Santa Cruz (Portuguese: Igreja de Santa Cruz), and the Hospital of the Brotherhood of the Holy Cross of Jerusalem (Portuguese: Irmandade de Santa Cruz de Jerusalem), constructed in 1581, and later supported by the nuns of the Order Hospitaler;
  • Church of Santa Eulália (Portuguese: Igreja de Santa Eulália), is a 13th–14th century Romanesque church, located near Bom Jesus do Monte;
  • Church of Santa Maria (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Ferreiros/Igreja de Santa Maria), constructed in 1560, under the orders of Archbishop Bartolomeu dos Mártires, as a church of the Society of Jesus;
  • Church of Santo André (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Gondizalves/Igreja de Santo André), an example of the reformulations of the Modernist aesthetic of the mid-20th century: the 18th-century church was adapted and expanded after the parish's de-annexation in 1975;
  • Chapel of São Frutuoso, also known as the Chapel of São Frutuoso of Montélios or the Chapel of São Salvador of Montélios, is a pre-Romanesque chapel, forming part of group of religious buildings that include the Royal Church originally built by the Visigoths in the 7th century, in the form of a Greek cross.[33]
  • Chapel of São Sebastião das Caravelheiras (Portuguese: Capela de São Sebastião das Caravelheiras)
  • Church of São Martinho (Portuguese: Igreja Matriz de Espinho/Igreja de São Martinho), the Baroque and Classical parochial church of Espinho, known for its ornate façade and belfrey, as well as its Rococo interior;
  • Church of São Miguel de Frossos (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Frossos/Igreja de São Miguel), a 16th-century parochial church in the civil parish of Frossos;
  • Church of São Miguel de Gualtar (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Gualtar/Igreja de São Miguel), part of the intense building period of the 16th–17th century, the parochial church of Gultar was constructed in the 17th century, but later remodelled during the 18th century;
  • Church of São Paio (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial de Arcos/Igreja de São Paio), located in Arcos, the church is an early 18th-century church (built in 1706);
  • Church of São Paulo (Portuguese: Igreja de São Paulo e Seminário de Santiago), the historical seminary and church of Saint Paul with its contrast between stoic façade and decorated Baroque interior, built in the era of archbishop Bartholomew;
  • Church of São Pedro de Lomar (Portuguese: Igreja de São Pedro de Lomar), remnant of ancient Benedictine monastery of São Pedro in Lomar, the Church of Saint Peter exemplifies a mix of Baroque, Mannerist and Neoclassical architecture;
  • Church of São Pedro de Maximinos (Portuguese: Igreja de São Pedro de Maximinos), known for the missing organ of organist Manuel de Sá Couto;
  • Church of São Tiago (Portuguese: Igreja Paroquial da Cividade/Igreja de São Tiago)
  • Church of São Vicente (Portuguese: Igreja de São Vicente)
  • Convent of Nossa Senhora do Carmo (Portuguese: Convento de Nossa Senhora do Carmo), principally recognizable for its central spire/belfrey, which was designed by João de Moura Coutinho de Almeida e Eça, and constructed in the 17th–18th century;
  • Church of the Misericórdia (Portuguese: Igreja da Misericórdia)
  • Church of the Third Order of St. Francis (Portuguese: Igreja dos Terceiros), the Terceiros began the process of constructing their church in 1685, which they dedicated to Our Lady of Conception (Portuguese: Nossa Senhora da Conceição);
  • Church, Convent and College of the Congregation of São Filipe de Néri (Portuguese: Igreja dos Congregados), attributed to the architect André Soares, for the complex/risky façade of the church and corner convent windows, Monk's chapel (or Chapel of Our Lady of the Appearance), and retable of Our Lady of Pain (Portuguese: Nossa Senhora das Dores)
  • Convent of Nossa Senhora da Conceição (Portuguese: Convento da Nossa Senhora da Conceição), which includes the Chapel of São Domingos, an 18th-century convent, home to the Instituto Monsenhor Ariosa;
  • Convent of Pópulo (Portuguese: Convento do Pópulo), the Mannerist, Baroque, Rococo and Neoclassical austere elements of the convent belying the extravagant interior, that was originally the home to Augustine monks, highlighted by the Baroque façade of the Church of Pópulo (Portuguese: Igreja de Pópulo);
  • Convent of Salvador (Portuguese: Convento do Salvador/Lar Conde de Agrolongo), began with the need to transfer the nuns from the Monastery of Vitorino das Donas in 1528
  • Convent of São Francisco de Montélios (Portuguese: Convento de São Francisco/Igreja de São Jerónimo de Real), the Baroque, Rococo and Neoclassical convent, highlighted by the imposing three-storey façade of the Church of São Jerónimo;
  • Cross of Nossa Senhora dos Aflitos (Portuguese: Cruzeiro da Nossa Senhora dos Aflitos), a Baroque cross on an ionic column, with an image of Christ in wood, surmounted by a rectangular Tuscan colonnade and roof;
  • Cross of the Espírito Santo (Portuguese: Cruzeiro do Espírito Santo)
  • Monastery of Dumio (Portuguese: Ruínas Arqueológicas de São Martinho de Dume), the ancient religious seat founded by Martin of Braga in the provincial centre of Dume;
  • Monastery of Tibães (Portuguese: Mosteiro de Tibães), the 17th–18th century Benedictine monastery renowned for the ornate/artistic gilt work in its chancel and altars;
  • Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte (inscribed on the World Heritage List in July, 2019[34]), constructed on Monte Santo, overlooking the urban sprawl of Braga, the 18th to early-19th century, Neoclassic sanctuary and church (itself preceded by Baroque stairway), is reachable by trail or Bom Jesus funicular (one of the oldest in Iberian Peninsula);
  • Sanctuary of Nossa Senhora do Sameiro (Portuguese: Santuário de Nossa Senhora do Sameiro), isolated on the hilltop of Monte do Sameiro, the church and retreat began in 1861, from the mind of Father Martinho António Pereira da Silva, who wished to construct a monument dedicated to Our Lady of the Conception;
  • Sanctuary of Santa Maria Madalena (Portuguese: Santuário de Santa Maria Madalena/Santuário da Falperra), located on Monte Falperra, the Baroque-era sanctuary church, was designed by local architect André Soares, incorporating decorative elements into a two-bell tower homage to the Mary Magdalene;
  • Sé Cathedral of Braga (Portuguese: Sé Catedral de Braga)
  • Wayside shrine of São Brás (Portuguese: Alminhas de São Brás), although conjecturally a contemporary monument, the wayside shrine in Ferreiros has the characteristics of many Baroque monuments in Braga;
  • Cross of Campo das Hortas (Cruzeiro do Campo das Hortas)
  • Cross of Santana (Cruzeiro de Santa Ana/Cruzeiro de Santana)
  • Cross of Tibães (Cruzeiro de Tibães)
 
 
 
 
The city's annual Bracara Augusta Roman historical reenactment festival, which transforms the city's historical center and its citizens to their ancient selves.

Museums

 
Braga, Portugal

In addition, many of the district's treasures and historical artifacts are housed in several museums that are scattered throughout the city, such as:

Education

 
Circo Theatre, Avenida da Liberdade, Portugal

The city is the headquarters and main campus for the Universidade do Minho (Minho University), a public university founded in 1973. A campus of Portugal's oldest private university of Portugal, the Universidade Católica Portuguesa, was also established in 1967, as well as the Escola Secundária Sá de Miranda (the oldest Secondary school in Braga).

In the late 2000s, the International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory also opened their international research centre in the city.

The Braga Pedagogical Farm is a farm dealing with animals and agriculture, welcoming extra-curricular activities from schools and visitors.

Sports

Braga's football team, Sporting Clube de Braga, was founded in 1921 and play in the top division of Portuguese football, the Liga Portugal bwin, from Braga Municipal Stadium, carved out of the Monte Castro hill that overlooks the city. Braga has had considerable success in recent years, winning the Taça de Portugal (Portuguese Cup) for the second time in 2016 and the third in 2021 and reaching the Europa League final in 2011, which they lost to fellow Portuguese side FC Porto.

The Rampa da Falperra, a round of the European Hillclimb Championship, is held every year in the outskirts of the city.

The Circuito Vasco Sameiro and adjacent the Kartódromo Internacional de Braga are located around the local airfield. The racing track held European Touring Car Cup events in 2009 and 2010, and the KIB has held rounds of the Karting World Championship.

Notable citizens

 
Paulo Orosio
 
Statue of Manuel Gomes da Costa in Braga

Public service

Arts & Science

 
Carlos Amarante

Sport

 
Emanuel Silva, 2008

International relations

Braga is twinned with:[35]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Statistics Portugal". www.ine.pt. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
  2. ^ Eurostat 7 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ (in Portuguese), Braga, Portugal, 2012, archived from the original on 4 May 2012, retrieved 19 April 2012
  4. ^ Machado, José Barbosa (1 January 2014). Introdução à História da Língua e Cultura Portuguesas. Edições Vercial. ISBN 9789897001857. Retrieved 27 March 2018 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Marques, António Henrique R. de Oliveira (1997). História de Portugal : manual para uso de estudantes e outros curiosos de assuntos do passado pátrio (13th ed.). Lisboa: Presença. pp. 43–44. ISBN 972-23-2189-7. OCLC 476465662.
  6. ^ Thompson, E. A. Romans and Barbarians: The Decline of the Western Empire. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1982. ISBN 0-299-08700-X pp. 153–154.
  7. ^ Díaz Martínez, Pablo de la Cruz (2011). El reino suevo (411-585). Tres Cantos, Madrid, España. ISBN 978-84-460-3648-7. OCLC 958059531.
  8. ^ Visigothic Spain : new approaches. Edward James. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1980. ISBN 0-19-822543-1. OCLC 5100979.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. ^ Wace, Henry; Piercy, William Coleman, eds. (2014). A dictionary of early Christian biography: and literature to the end of the sixth century A.D. ; with an account of the principal sects and heresies. Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publ. pp. 1263–1264. ISBN 978-1-61970-269-1.
  10. ^ Aranha, Boaventura Maciel (1761). Cuidados da morte e descuidos da vida... Com a addicao das prodigios as vidas dos dous mayores santos... na officina de Francisco Borges de Sousa. p. 276.
  11. ^ a b Cunha, D. Rodrigo da (1634). Primeira [-segunda] parte, da historia ecclesiastica dos arcebispos de Braga, e dos Santos, e Varoes illustres, que florecerão neste arcebispado. Por dom Rodrigo da Cunha arcebispo, & senhor de Braga, primàz das Hespanhas (in Portuguese). Vol. II. pp. 18–22.
  12. ^ Menéndez Pidal, Ramón (1906). PRIMERA CRÓNICA GENERAL. ESTORIA DE ESPAÑA DE ALFONSO X (2022 ed.). Biblioteca Digital de Castilla y León. p. 357. Retrieved 10 June 2023.
  13. ^ de Braga, Bernardo (1843). da Silveira Pinto Albano, Antero (ed.). Tratado sobre a precedencia do Reino de Portugal ao Reino de Napoles. Typogr. da revista. p. 25.
  14. ^ Cunha, D. Rodrigo da (1634). Primeira [-segunda] parte, da historia ecclesiastica dos arcebispos de Braga, e dos Santos, e Varoes illustres, que florecerão neste arcebispado. Por dom Rodrigo da Cunha arcebispo, & senhor de Braga, primàz das Hespanhas (in Portuguese). Vol. II. pp. 2–29.
  15. ^ Bandeira, Miguel (1993). "O espaço urbano de Braga em meados do séc. XVIII". Revista da Faculdade de Letras - Geografia. IX: 171–173.
  16. ^ Portocarrero, Gustavo (2010). Braga na Idade Moderna : paisagem e identidade. Tomar: CEIPHAR. pp. 81–100. ISBN 978-972-95143-2-6. OCLC 733958410.
  17. ^ Capela, José Viriato (2003). As freguesias do distrito de Braga nas Memórias Paroquiais de 1758: a construção do imaginário minhoto setecentista.
  18. ^ Pereira, P. Gomes (2009), "Caracterização do Concelho de Braga", (PDF) (in Portuguese), Braga, Portugal: Unidade de Saúde Pública de Braga, archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015, retrieved 21 March 2012
  19. ^ "Normals Climatológicas". Instituto de Meteorologia, IPMA. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g Census de 1991, 2001 e Território em números de 2004 (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: INE – Instituto Nacional de Estatistica, 2004, retrieved 24 March 2012
  21. ^ "0000200147" (PDF). DRE (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 29 December 2022.
  22. ^ Diário da República. "Law nr. 11-A/2013, pages 552 26–28" (PDF) (in Portuguese). Retrieved 18 July 2014.
  23. ^ "De Braga para o mundo, a PRIMAVERA da cidade". Alumni UMinho (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  24. ^ "PRIMAVERA - Business Software Solutions SA". COTEC Portugal (in European Portuguese). Retrieved 3 March 2023.
  25. ^ Aptiv (13 November 2019), Aptiv's Braga Technical Center, retrieved 16 January 2021
  26. ^ "Politikprominenz bei Bosch: Bundeskanzlerin Merkel und Premier Costa eröffnen Tech Center in Portugal". Bosch Media Service (in German). Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  27. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Dordio, Paulo (1994). SIPA (ed.). "21 Marcos Miliários (série Capela) Braga incerta via (v.PT01130700002)" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA–Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  28. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Dordio, Paulo (1994), SIPA (ed.), Termas romanas de Maximinos/Alto da Cividade/Colina dos Maximinos (v.PT010303070040) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 26 April 2012
  29. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Leão, Miguel; Basto, Sónia (2010). SIPA (ed.). (in Portuguese). Lisbon: SIPA–Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Archived from the original on 17 March 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  30. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Santos, João (1994), SIPA (ed.), (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, archived from the original on 21 August 2016, retrieved 15 August 2016
  31. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Dordio, Paulo; Gonçalves, Joaquim (2007). SIPA (ed.). (in Portuguese). Lisbon: SIPA–Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  32. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Santos, João (1994). SIPA (ed.). (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA –Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Archived from the original on 1 April 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  33. ^ Sereno, Isabel; Dordio, Paulo; Gonçalves, Joaquim (2004). SIPA (ed.). (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  34. ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Portugal". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  35. ^ . cm-braga.pt (in Portuguese). Braga. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 10 December 2019.

Bibliography

External links

  • Virtual Braga

braga, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, brah, portuguese, ˈbɾaɣɐ, listen, proto, celtic, bracara, city, municipality, capital, northwestern, portuguese, district, historical, cultural, minho, province, municipality, resident, population, inhabitants, 2021, rep. For other uses see Braga disambiguation Braga ˈ b r ɑː ɡ e BRAH ge Portuguese ˈbɾaɣɐ listen Proto Celtic Bracara is a city and a municipality capital of the northwestern Portuguese district of Braga and of the historical and cultural Minho Province Braga Municipality had a resident population of 193 333 inhabitants in 2021 1 representing the seventh largest municipality in Portugal by population Its area is 183 40 km2 2 Its agglomerated urban area extends to the Cavado River and is the third most populated urban area in Portugal behind Lisbon and Porto Metropolitan Areas BragaMunicipalityTop Banco de Portugal Sameiro Sanctuary middle Congregados Church Bom Jesus do Monte Tibaes Monastery bottom Arco da Porta Nova Braga Episcopal Palace FlagCoat of armsCoordinates 41 33 4 N 8 25 42 W 41 55111 N 8 42833 W 41 55111 8 42833Country PortugalRegionNorteIntermunic comm CavadoDistrictBragaParishes37 see textGovernment PresidentRicardo Rio PSD Area Total183 40 km2 70 81 sq mi Elevation200 m 700 ft Highest elevation558 m 1 831 ft Population 2021 Total193 333 Density1 100 km2 2 700 sq mi Time zoneUTC 00 00 WET Summer DST UTC 01 00 WEST Postal code470xArea code253Websitewww wbr cm braga wbr ptIt is host to the oldest Portuguese archdiocese the Archdiocese of Braga of the Catholic Church and it is the seat of the Primacy of the Spains During the Roman Empire then known as Bracara Augusta the settlement was the capital of the province of Gallaecia and later of the Kingdom of the Suebi that was one of the first to separate from the Roman Empire Inside of the city there is also a castle tower that can be visited Nowadays Braga is a major hub for inland Northern Portugal and it is an important stop on the Portuguese Way path of the Road of St James The city was also the European Youth Capital in 2012 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre Roman 1 2 Roman rule 1 3 Braga in Late Antiquity and Middle Ages 1 4 Braga in the Kingdom of Portugal 1 5 Republic 2 Geography 2 1 Physical geography 2 2 Climate 2 3 Human geography 2 4 Civil parishes 3 Economy 4 Transport 5 Architecture 5 1 Archaeological 5 2 Civic 5 3 Military 5 4 Religious 6 Museums 7 Education 8 Sports 9 Notable citizens 9 1 Public service 9 2 Arts amp Science 9 3 Sport 10 International relations 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory EditSee also Timeline of Braga and Ecclesiastical history of Braga A 16th century map of Braga when the city was enclosed by its mediaeval wall The large building in the centre is the Cathedral while the Episcopal Palace and courtyards can be seen above the cathedral and the ancient Castle of Braga Ponte de Prozelo Braga The 18th century municipal hall that houses the local government authority The skyline of Braga during the mid 19th century Pre Roman Edit Human occupation of the region of Braga dates back thousands of years documented by vestiges of monumental structures starting in the Megalithic era During the Iron Age the Castro culture extended into the northwest characterized by Bracari peoples who occupied the high ground in strategically located fortified settlements castrum The region became the domain of the Callaici Bracarii a Celtic 4 tribe who occupied what is now northern Portugal Galicia and Asturias in the northwest of Iberia Roman rule Edit The Romans began their conquest of the region around 136 BC and finished it by conquering the northern regions during the reign of Emperor Augustus The civitas of Bracara Augusta was founded in 16 BC in the context of the administrative reorganization of these Roman acquisitions Bracara was rededicated to the Emperor taking on the name Bracara Augusta The city of Bracara Augusta developed greatly during the 1st century and reached its maximum extension around the 2nd century Towards the end of the 3rd century the Emperor Diocletian promoted the city to the status of capital of the administrative area Conventus bracarensis the southwestern area of the newly founded Roman province of Gallaecia Braga in Late Antiquity and Middle Ages Edit The city was described as prosperous by the poet Ausonius in the 4th century 5 Between 402 and 470 the Germanic Invasions of the Iberian Peninsula occurred and the area was conquered by the Suebi a Germanic people from Central Europe According to records the city was protected by a wall still in use since the 3rd century and the old Roman ampitheatre was repurposed into a fortress 5 In 410 the Suebi established a Kingdom in northwest Iberia covering what is present day s Northern half of Portugal 6 Galicia and Asturias which they maintained as Gallaecia and had Bracara as their capital This kingdom was founded by Hermeric and lasted for over 150 years However the departure of the Vandals and the arrival of the Visigoths brought a new instability to the region Between 419 and 422 Braga was threatened by the Vandals so it prepared itself for a siege closed its gates and refused to open them this led to the destruction of the surrounding countryside 5 Nevertheless between 429 and 455 the Suebi made a military comeback in Iberia reinforcing their hold in Galeicia and Lusitania 5 In 455 while the Visigothic king Theodoric II sacked Braga utterly destroying many historical and archaeological records 5 the Suebi king Rechiar escaped the city wounded to Porto 7 However records of a list of dioceses and parishes of Braga made in 570 still exist 5 By about 584 the Visigoths took permanent control of Gallaecia from the Suebi and Braga was made a provincial capital Because historians are still unsure of the dating of the Chapel of Sao Pedro de Balsemao in Lamego currently Braga hosts the oldest chapel in Portugal the Chapel of Sao Frutuoso The chapel was built by the Visigoths on top of a Roman temple to Asclepius and it was made to be a Royal Chapel In 656 AD it was consecrated by Saint Fructuosus 5 to be used as his tomb A 17th century engraving of Braga showing the walls of the city which were progressively demolished to make way for new constructions A view of Rua Julio Lima at the beginning of the 20th century Historical records show so far that the first known bishop of Braga was named Paternus 5 who famously renounced priscillianism at the First Council of Toledo in September of 400 AD We also have records of a bishop named Balconius 415 447 who was also recorded to be present when the Iberian clergy received in 435 a German priest from Arabia accompanied by several Greeks with news from the Council of Ephesus 431 5 Balconius was also a contemporary and correspondent of Pope Leo I 5 Tradition however states that Saint Peter of Rates was the first bishop of Braga a Jew personally elevated to the role by Saint James Another bishop Saint Ovidius d 135 AD is also sometimes considered one of the first bishops of this city Braga had an important role in the Christianization of the Iberian Peninsula In the early 5th century Paulus Orosius a friend of Augustine of Hippo wrote several theological works that expounded the Christian faith While thanks to the work of Saint Martin of Braga the Suebi in Iberia renounced the Arian and Priscillianist heresies during two synods held here in the 6th century 5 It is also worth noting that Rechiar the suebi king was also the first Germanic king in Europe to convert to Chalcedonian Christianism predating Clovis of the Franks 8 At the time Martin also founded an important monastery in Dumio Dume and it was in Braga that the Archbishopric of Braga held their councils There were also some attempts at further elevating the religious status of the city such as Paulus Orosius and Avitus of Braga s attempt at bringing relics of Saint Stephen from the Holy Land to Braga Originally Avitus entrusted the delivery of the relics to Paulus Orosius however after arriving at Majorca the theologian heard news of the invasion of the peninsula by the Vandals and halted his pilgrimage to return to North Africa The relics never reached their destination and their fates are unknown 9 As a consequence the Archbishops of Braga later claimed the title of Primatus Totus Hispania claiming supremacy over the entire Hispanic church Yet their authority was never accepted throughout Hispania and today they only retain the title of Primate of Portugal The bishop Balconius who was later elevated to become the first Archbishop of Braga and according to later sources was also the first to be given said title 10 11 The transition from Visigothic reigns to the Muslim conquest of Iberia was very obscure representing a period of decline for the city The Moors briefly captured Braga in 714 716 but were repelled by Christian forces under Alfonso I of Asturias in 773 12 alongside Chaves Porto and Lamego with intermittent attacks until 868 when they were definitively ousted by Alfonso III of Asturias The bishopric was restored in 1070 and elevated to new heights The first new Archbishop Peter of Braga 1096 immediately started rebuilding the Cathedral which was modified many times during the following centuries According to historical records and oral tradition the Archbishop Diego Gelmirez of Santiago de Compostela fearing the rise of the Cathedral of Braga stole the relics of Braga s saints in an attempt to diminish the religious importance of the city 11 The relics only returned to Braga in the 1990s When after his death Alfonso III the Great of the Kingdom of Asturias divided his kingdom among his sons in 908 he assigned the Kingdom of Galicia to Ordono of Galicia who established his capital in Braga 13 Between 1093 and 1147 Braga became the residential seat of the Portuguese court In the early 12th century Count Henry of Portugal and bishop Geraldo de Moissac reclaimed the archbishopric seat for Braga with power over a large area in Iberia The medieval city developed around the cathedral with the maximum authority in the city retained by the archbishop Braga in the Kingdom of Portugal Edit Braga as the main center of Christianity in Iberia during the Reconquista until the emergence of Santiago de Compostela and later the conquest of Toledo from the Muslims in 1085 held a prominent stage in medieval politics being a major contributor to the Independence of Portugal with the intervention of the Archbishop D Paio Mendes in the Vatican with Pope Alexander III which lead to the promulgation of the Bula Manifestis Probatum in 1179 recognizing Portugal as an independent Kingdom under D Afonso I Henriques It is traditionally told that the future king was baptized by Saint Gerald of Braga although the exact location is still being debated 14 Because of this support for D Afonso Henriques the new king gave large privileges to the city of Braga handing it over to direct control of the Church basically making it a personal fiefdom of the Archbishop This legal particularism continued all throughout history until the instauration of the Republic giving the city and its surrounding area the nickname of Paiz Bracarense roughly translated as Country of Braga 15 In the 16th century due to its distance from the coast and provincial status Braga did not profit from the adventures associated with the Age of Portuguese Discoveries which favoured cities like Lisbon Evora and Coimbra new seats for the Portuguese court Yet Archbishop Diogo de Sousa who sponsored several urban improvements in the city including the enlargement of streets the creation of public squares and the foundation of hospitals and new churches managed to modernize the community He expanded and remodelled the cathedral by adding a new chapel in the Manueline style and generally turning the mediaeval town into a Renaissance city A similar period of rejuvenation occurred during the 18th century when the archbishops of the House of Braganza contracted architects like Andre Soares and Carlos Amarante to modernize and rejuvenate the city they began a series of architectural transformations to churches and civic institutions in the Baroque style including the municipal hall public library the Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte and many urban palaces D Luis de Sousa was another main archbishop who with other merits ordered the Church of the Parish of Saint Victor to be rebuilt ordered the Campo de S Ana to be enlarged to rebuild the Church of S Vicente to requalify the Chapel of S Sebastian and the construction of the Igreja dos Congregados which would later be monumentalized into the current version of the Basilica of the Congregados Likewise under the auspices of this diplomatic archbishop the canon of the Braga Chapter Joao Meira Carrilho ordered the construction of the Chapel of the Congregation of the Oratory that existed within the Campo de S Ana modern day Avenida Central 16 The old fortress built on top of the Roman ampitheatre still stood in the 18th century a description of it was made during the reign of Queen D Maria I in the southern part of Maximinos 5 but in search of the Roman foundations it was eventually torn down and it is now an archaeological site In 1758 Braga like many other places was included in the census requested by the monarchy under the 1st Marquis of Pombal These records are known as the Parochial Memories Memorias Paroquiais which can be consulted through various sources 17 In March 1809 it was the scene of the Battle of Braga when French troops under Marshal Soult took the town from its Portuguese garrison With the invasion of French troops during the Peninsular Wars the city was relegated once again to a provincial status But by the second half of that century with influence from Portuguese immigrants living in Brazil new money and tastes resulted in improvements to architecture and infrastructures Republic Edit In the 20th century Braga faced similar periods of growth and decline demographic and urban pressures from urban to rural migration meant that the city s infrastructures had to be improved in order to satisfy greater demands Geography EditPhysical geography Edit Snow in Braga Picture Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte Situated in the heart of Minho Braga is located in a transitional region between the east and west between mountains forests grand valleys plains and fields constructing natural spaces moulded by human intervention Geographically with an area of 184 square kilometres 71 sq mi it is bordered in the north by the municipalities of Vila Verde and Amares northeast and east by Povoa de Lanhoso south and southeast with Guimaraes and Vila Nova de Famalicao and west by the municipality of Barcelos 18 The topography in the municipality is characterized by irregular valleys interspersed by mountainous spaces fed by rivers running in parallel with the principal rivers In the north it is limited by the Cavado River in the south by terrain of the Serra dos Picos to a height of 566 metres 1 857 ft and towards the east by the Serra dos Carvalhos to a height of 479 metres 1 572 ft opening to the municipalities of Vila Nova de Famalicao and Barcelos The territory extends from the northeast to southwest accompanying the valleys of the two rivers fed by many of its tributaries forming small platforms between 20 metres 66 ft and 570 metres 1 870 ft The municipality lies between 20 metres 66 ft and 572 metres 1 877 ft with the urbanized centre located at approximately 215 metres 705 ft In the north where the municipality is marked by the Cavado the terrain is semi planar the east is mountainous owing to the Serra do Carvalho 479 metres 1 572 ft Serra dos Picos 566 metres 1 857 ft Monte do Sameiro 572 metres 1 877 ft and Monte de Santa Marta 562 metres 1 844 ft Between the Serra do Carvalho and Serra dos Picos is the River Este forming the valley of Vale d Este Similarly between the Serra dos Picos and Monte do Sameiro exists the plateau of Sobreposta Pedralva To the south and west the terrain is a mix of mountains plateaus and medium size valleys permitting the passage of the River Este and giving birth to other confluences including the River Veiga River Labriosca and various ravines Climate Edit Braga has a warm summer Mediterranean climate similar to other cities in the northwest Iberian Peninsula except for having significantly hotter summer temperatures due to being some distance from the ocean the absolute maximum is as much as 5 C 9 F higher than neighbouring A Coruna or Santiago de Compostela The highest and lowest recorded temperatures are 42 2 C 108 0 F and 6 3 C 20 7 F respectively The climate is affected by the Atlantic Ocean which influences westerly winds that are channeled through the region s valleys transporting large humid air masses Consequently the climate tends to be pleasant with clearly defined seasons The air masses have the effect of maintaining morning relative humidity around 80 annual mean temperatures hover between 12 5 C 54 5 F and 17 5 C 63 5 F Owing to nocturnal cooling frost usually forms frequently between three and four months of the year about 30 days of frost annually and annually the region receives 1 449 millimetres 57 0 in of precipitation with the major intensity occurring between fall winter and spring Climate data for Braga 1981 2010 normals extremes 1941 2006 altitude 190 m 620 ft Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 24 0 75 2 23 5 74 3 29 5 85 1 31 0 87 8 35 5 95 9 38 5 101 3 38 5 101 3 42 2 108 0 38 5 101 3 33 3 91 9 28 5 83 3 24 1 75 4 42 2 108 0 Average high C F 13 7 56 7 14 8 58 6 17 6 63 7 18 3 64 9 21 1 70 0 25 4 77 7 27 8 82 0 28 0 82 4 25 5 77 9 20 9 69 6 16 8 62 2 14 4 57 9 20 3 68 5 Daily mean C F 9 0 48 2 9 9 49 8 12 3 54 1 13 2 55 8 15 8 60 4 19 5 67 1 21 4 70 5 21 4 70 5 19 4 66 9 15 9 60 6 12 3 54 1 10 2 50 4 15 0 59 0 Average low C F 4 3 39 7 4 9 40 8 7 0 44 6 7 9 46 2 10 4 50 7 13 5 56 3 14 9 58 8 14 7 58 5 13 2 55 8 10 8 51 4 7 7 45 9 6 0 42 8 9 6 49 3 Record low C F 6 3 20 7 4 5 23 9 5 0 23 0 1 2 29 8 0 5 31 1 3 3 37 9 7 5 45 5 6 7 44 1 3 8 38 8 2 5 36 5 1 7 28 9 2 5 27 5 6 3 20 7 Average precipitation mm inches 176 4 6 94 114 8 4 52 121 6 4 79 130 8 5 15 112 9 4 44 48 6 1 91 22 0 0 87 34 0 1 34 81 7 3 22 191 7 7 55 193 9 7 63 220 2 8 67 1 448 6 57 03 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 14 8 13 5 12 2 13 5 13 4 8 2 5 4 4 7 7 4 12 7 13 1 15 5 134 4Source Instituto de Meteorologia 19 Human geography Edit Panorama of Braga as seen from the Picoto hill A similar panorama taken from the Este River valley Distribution of civil parishes in the municipality of Braga Population of themunicipality of Braga 1849 2004 YearPop 184940 004 190058 339 45 8 191160 836 4 3 192057 019 6 3 193060 761 6 6 194075 846 24 8 195084 142 10 9 196092 938 10 5 197096 220 3 5 1981125 472 30 4 1991141 256 12 6 2001164 192 16 2 2011181 474 10 5 2021193 333 6 5 The municipality is densely populated with approximately 962 inhabitants per square kilometre equivalent to 181 474 residents 2011 it is one of the more populous territories in Portugal as well as one of the younger markets 20 The majority of the population concentrates in the urban area of Braga itself where densities are more than 10000 per square kilometre The Bracarense population consists of approximately 78954 male and 85238 female individuals with 35 of the population less than 25 years of age while seniors conform to 11 of the population the working population of the municipality occupies 54 of this structure 20 Although largely native Portuguese other segments of the population include Brazilians Africans principally from the former Portuguese colonies Chinese and eastern European peoples namely Ukrainians 20 Beach in Cavado River Braga The urban structure includes approximately 70 268 residences 2001 even as the typical classic representation of family only includes 51 173 members in the municipality 20 The extra homes are primarily temporary residences normally for students migrant workers and professionals working in the city There is also a great number of homes owned by Portuguese residents living overseas who use the homes periodically while in Portugal even as constant and development has attracted new growth in the population 20 Further the difference in resident to transitory population means that on average the population of Braga hovers between 174 000 and 230 000 individuals annually 20 Growth in the population roughly 16 2 between 1991 and 2001 occurred mainly in the older suburban civil parishes such as Nogueira now abolished 124 6 Frossos now abolished 68 4 Real now abolished 59 8 and Lamacaes now abolished 50 9 20 21 Civil parishes Edit Administratively the municipality is divided into 37 civil parishes freguesias 22 Adaufe Arentim e Cunha Braga Maximinos Se e Cividade Braga Sao Jose de Sao Lazaro e Sao Joao do Souto Cabreiros e Passos Sao Juliao Celeiros Aveleda e Vimieiro Crespos e Pousada Escudeiros e Penso Santo Estevao e Sao Vicente Espinho Esporoes Este Sao Pedro e Sao Mamede Ferreiros e Gondizalves Figueiredo Gualtar Guisande e Oliveira Sao Pedro Lamas Lomar e Arcos Merelim Sao Paio Panoias e Parada de Tibaes Merelim Sao Pedro e Frossos Mire de Tibaes Morreira e Trandeiras Nogueira Fraiao e Lamacaes Nogueiro e Tenoes Padim da Graca Palmeira Pedralva Priscos Real Dume e Semelhe Ruilhe Santa Lucrecia de Algeriz e Navarra Sao Vicente Sao Victor Sequeira Sobreposta Tadim Tebosa Vilaca e Fradelos There is no formal city government only municipal government authority with local administration handled by the individual juntas de freguesia or civil parish councils Economy Edit The International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory INL in Braga The major industries in the municipality are construction metallurgy and mechanics electrical and electronic equipment software development and web design The computer industry is significant Braga hosts PRIMAVERA Business Software Solutions SA PRIMAVERA BSS company headquarters 23 24 a Portuguese multinational software company best known for its leading enterprise project management software The INL International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory a joint research center in nanotechnology established and funded by both the Portuguese and the Spanish governments is also headquartered in Braga The automotive industry has a long history in Braga Aptiv operates a technical center for the development and production of automotive infotainment systems 25 This plant was previously owned by Grundig Next to Aptiv Robert Bosch GmbH operates a similar technical center mainly for branches of infotainment and sensors This plant was previously founded by Blaupunkt Bosch has been working closely with the University of Minho in Portugal since 2012 producing one of the country s largest university corporate partnerships In the process many projects for the mobility of the future are being tackled In 2018 German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa were on site for the launch of a new technology campus 26 The university headquartered in Braga is also by itself a major driving force of the city s economy Transport EditThe municipality has a small sized airfield Aerodromo de Braga in Palmeira The major international airport used by the people of Braga is the Sa Carneiro International Airport also known as Porto Airport located 50 kilometres 31 mi away in Porto Metropolitan Area Access to the international airport located near Porto is made by public transit fom Braga city centre roughly 40 minutes or aerobus 50 minutes Braga is serviced by both regional and high speed rail connection to major urban centres in the country and abroad It has an efficient bus network TUB Transportes Urbanos de Braga with 76 lines in the urban area and over a 300 km network Architecture Edit Central Avenue in Braga Campo das Hortas Braga The remains of the historic keep of the Castle of Braga a defensive structure that circled the old town The Chapel of the Coimbras one of the first Manueline era chapels in Braga The Arch of Rua Souto commonly referred as the Arco da Porta Nova an 18th century ceremonial archThe region of Braga is scattered with Neolithic Roman Medieval and Modernist monuments buildings and structures attracting tourists Although there are many examples of these structures only the following have been classified by the Instituto de Gestao do Patrimonio Arquitectonico e Arqueologico as National Monuments Archaeological Edit Roman milestone XXIX on Via Romana XVIII the road linking the Iberian cities of Bracara Augusta and Asturica Augusta Castro of Sao Mamede Castro de Monte Redondo Castro Monte Cossourado Castro de Sao Mamede Roman milestones several Roman era granite markers currently on display at the Museum D Diogo de Sousa dating from AD 41 to 238 that is the reigns of Emperor Claudius to Maximinus II 27 Roman Thermae of Maximinus Portuguese Termas romanas de Maximinos Alto da Cividade Colina dos Maximinos discovered in the 20th century the thermae occupy 800 square metres 8 600 sq ft in the civil parish of Braga Maximinos Se e Cividade and were constructed in the 1st to late 3rd century 28 Civic Edit Arch of Porta Nova Rua de Souto Arco da Porta Nova Arco da Rua do Souto a Baroque and Neoclassical arch designed by Andre Soares in the late 18th century and decorates the western gate of a medieval wall It was opened in 1512 and since has been traditionally used to present to promote to visiting dignitaries and celebrities 29 Palace of the Falcoes Portuguese Palacio dos Falcoes Governo Civil de Braga a Baroque era palace originally commissioned by Francisco de Meira Carrilho on 23 July 1703 and later upon successive renovations used by the Civil Governor s residence Fountain of the Idol Portuguese Fonte do Idolo the 1st century Roman fountain dedicated to an indigenous god located in the central civil parish of Braga Sao Jose de Sao Lazaro e Sao Joao do Souto Fountain of the Iron Waters Portuguese Fonte das Aguas Ferreas following the discovery in July 1173 of iron rich springs in the parish of Fraiao Archbishop Gaspar de Braganca ordered the municipal council to begin the canalization of these waters for public use giving rise to a series of fountains such as the Baroque decorated main fountain Hospital of Sao Marcos Portuguese Hospital de Sao Marcos with a facade comparable to any religious monument in the city the Hospital of Sao Marcos is an example of the complex Baroque style of Carlos Amarante featuring ornate double belfry and accents Pillory of Braga Portuguese Pelourinho de Braga the 15th century pillory that marks municipal authority for the town was constructed demolished and moved various times before being relocated on the grounds of the Se Cathedral 30 Palace of Raio Portuguese Palacio de Raio an 18th century Baroque Rococo urban residence with richly decorated blue azulejo facade of Andre Soares Residence of the Crivos Portuguese Casas das Gelosias Casa dos Crivos a Renaissance era shop residence constructed outside the old walls characteristic of late Renaissance architecture and one of the few examples of a building covered in wood lattice facade from this period Seven Sources Aqueduct Portuguese Sete Fontes a complex network of aqueducts that provided potable water to citizenry of Braga Theatro Circo Portuguese Teatro Circo de Braga 20th century revivalist theatre known for its architecture as much for the films theatre plays and performances Bridge of Prado Ponte do Prado Bridge of Prozelo Ponte de Prozelo Ponte do Porto Military Edit Tower of Santiago Portuguese Torre de Santiago e troco das antigas muralhas de Braga part of the ancient walls of Braga the Tower of Santiago was designed by Portuguese Baroque master Andre Soares based on a mixture of Gothic Baroque and Rococo elements Tower of Castle of Braga Castelo de Braga actually the remnants of the castle s keep constructed during the reign of King Denis of Portugal which was part of the defensive system of the city of Braga and included a semi circular walled enclosure centred on the Se Cathedral 31 Religious Edit The sculpted black rock of the Se Cathedral of Braga seat of the Archbishop of Braga and Primate of Portugal and of the Hispanias The simple Romanesque facade of the Church of Sao Paulo The Populo Church that includes convent dependencies and cloister The Church of Santa Cruz courtesy the Irmandade de Santa Cruz Archiepiscopal Palace of Braga Portuguese Antigo Paco Arquiepiscopal de Braga between the 14th 18th centuries a religious residence but after the 20th century the home of the municipal offices public library and archive Chapel of the Espirito Santo Portuguese Capela do Espirito Santo an example of mixed styles the chapel includes elements of Baroque Neoclassical and Manerist eras Chapel of Nossa Senhora da Consolaca Portuguese Capela de Nossa Senhora da Consolacao a simple single nave chapel constructed in the Baroque style Chapel of Sao Bento Portuguese Capela de Sao Bento constructed in the middle of the 18th century the chapel was blessed by Archbishop Jose of Braganca in 1755 Chapel of Senhor do Bom Sucesso Portuguese Capela do Senhor do Bom Sucesso a Baroque and Neoclassical chapel is highlighted by a main facade typical of Andre Soares but constructed by Carlos Amarante at the beginning of his career who timidly applied Neoclassical decorative elements Chapel of the Coimbras Capela de Nossa Senhora da Conceicao Capela dos Coimbras Capela do Senhor Morto a Manueline chapel probably designed by Castillian architect Filipe Odarte with sculptures attributed to Hodart an altar by Joao de Ruao and posterior tomb sculptures by the same artist 32 Church of Santa Cruz Portuguese Igreja de Santa Cruz and the Hospital of the Brotherhood of the Holy Cross of Jerusalem Portuguese Irmandade de Santa Cruz de Jerusalem constructed in 1581 and later supported by the nuns of the Order Hospitaler Church of Santa Eulalia Portuguese Igreja de Santa Eulalia is a 13th 14th century Romanesque church located near Bom Jesus do Monte Church of Santa Maria Portuguese Igreja Paroquial de Ferreiros Igreja de Santa Maria constructed in 1560 under the orders of Archbishop Bartolomeu dos Martires as a church of the Society of Jesus Church of Santo Andre Portuguese Igreja Paroquial de Gondizalves Igreja de Santo Andre an example of the reformulations of the Modernist aesthetic of the mid 20th century the 18th century church was adapted and expanded after the parish s de annexation in 1975 Chapel of Sao Frutuoso also known as the Chapel of Sao Frutuoso of Montelios or the Chapel of Sao Salvador of Montelios is a pre Romanesque chapel forming part of group of religious buildings that include the Royal Church originally built by the Visigoths in the 7th century in the form of a Greek cross 33 Chapel of Sao Sebastiao das Caravelheiras Portuguese Capela de Sao Sebastiao das Caravelheiras Church of Sao Martinho Portuguese Igreja Matriz de Espinho Igreja de Sao Martinho the Baroque and Classical parochial church of Espinho known for its ornate facade and belfrey as well as its Rococo interior Church of Sao Miguel de Frossos Portuguese Igreja Paroquial de Frossos Igreja de Sao Miguel a 16th century parochial church in the civil parish of Frossos Church of Sao Miguel de Gualtar Portuguese Igreja Paroquial de Gualtar Igreja de Sao Miguel part of the intense building period of the 16th 17th century the parochial church of Gultar was constructed in the 17th century but later remodelled during the 18th century Church of Sao Paio Portuguese Igreja Paroquial de Arcos Igreja de Sao Paio located in Arcos the church is an early 18th century church built in 1706 Church of Sao Paulo Portuguese Igreja de Sao Paulo e Seminario de Santiago the historical seminary and church of Saint Paul with its contrast between stoic facade and decorated Baroque interior built in the era of archbishop Bartholomew Church of Sao Pedro de Lomar Portuguese Igreja de Sao Pedro de Lomar remnant of ancient Benedictine monastery of Sao Pedro in Lomar the Church of Saint Peter exemplifies a mix of Baroque Mannerist and Neoclassical architecture Church of Sao Pedro de Maximinos Portuguese Igreja de Sao Pedro de Maximinos known for the missing organ of organist Manuel de Sa Couto Church of Sao Tiago Portuguese Igreja Paroquial da Cividade Igreja de Sao Tiago Church of Sao Vicente Portuguese Igreja de Sao Vicente Convent of Nossa Senhora do Carmo Portuguese Convento de Nossa Senhora do Carmo principally recognizable for its central spire belfrey which was designed by Joao de Moura Coutinho de Almeida e Eca and constructed in the 17th 18th century Church of the Misericordia Portuguese Igreja da Misericordia Church of the Third Order of St Francis Portuguese Igreja dos Terceiros the Terceiros began the process of constructing their church in 1685 which they dedicated to Our Lady of Conception Portuguese Nossa Senhora da Conceicao Church Convent and College of the Congregation of Sao Filipe de Neri Portuguese Igreja dos Congregados attributed to the architect Andre Soares for the complex risky facade of the church and corner convent windows Monk s chapel or Chapel of Our Lady of the Appearance and retable of Our Lady of Pain Portuguese Nossa Senhora das Dores Convent of Nossa Senhora da Conceicao Portuguese Convento da Nossa Senhora da Conceicao which includes the Chapel of Sao Domingos an 18th century convent home to the Instituto Monsenhor Ariosa Convent of Populo Portuguese Convento do Populo the Mannerist Baroque Rococo and Neoclassical austere elements of the convent belying the extravagant interior that was originally the home to Augustine monks highlighted by the Baroque facade of the Church of Populo Portuguese Igreja de Populo Convent of Salvador Portuguese Convento do Salvador Lar Conde de Agrolongo began with the need to transfer the nuns from the Monastery of Vitorino das Donas in 1528 Convent of Sao Francisco de Montelios Portuguese Convento de Sao Francisco Igreja de Sao Jeronimo de Real the Baroque Rococo and Neoclassical convent highlighted by the imposing three storey facade of the Church of Sao Jeronimo Cross of Nossa Senhora dos Aflitos Portuguese Cruzeiro da Nossa Senhora dos Aflitos a Baroque cross on an ionic column with an image of Christ in wood surmounted by a rectangular Tuscan colonnade and roof Cross of the Espirito Santo Portuguese Cruzeiro do Espirito Santo Monastery of Dumio Portuguese Ruinas Arqueologicas de Sao Martinho de Dume the ancient religious seat founded by Martin of Braga in the provincial centre of Dume Monastery of Tibaes Portuguese Mosteiro de Tibaes the 17th 18th century Benedictine monastery renowned for the ornate artistic gilt work in its chancel and altars Sanctuary of Bom Jesus do Monte inscribed on the World Heritage List in July 2019 34 constructed on Monte Santo overlooking the urban sprawl of Braga the 18th to early 19th century Neoclassic sanctuary and church itself preceded by Baroque stairway is reachable by trail or Bom Jesus funicular one of the oldest in Iberian Peninsula Sanctuary of Nossa Senhora do Sameiro Portuguese Santuario de Nossa Senhora do Sameiro isolated on the hilltop of Monte do Sameiro the church and retreat began in 1861 from the mind of Father Martinho Antonio Pereira da Silva who wished to construct a monument dedicated to Our Lady of the Conception Sanctuary of Santa Maria Madalena Portuguese Santuario de Santa Maria Madalena Santuario da Falperra located on Monte Falperra the Baroque era sanctuary church was designed by local architect Andre Soares incorporating decorative elements into a two bell tower homage to the Mary Magdalene Se Cathedral of Braga Portuguese Se Catedral de Braga Wayside shrine of Sao Bras Portuguese Alminhas de Sao Bras although conjecturally a contemporary monument the wayside shrine in Ferreiros has the characteristics of many Baroque monuments in Braga Cross of Campo das Hortas Cruzeiro do Campo das Hortas Cross of Santana Cruzeiro de Santa Ana Cruzeiro de Santana Cross of Tibaes Cruzeiro de Tibaes The city s annual Bracara Augusta Roman historical reenactment festival which transforms the city s historical center and its citizens to their ancient selves Museums Edit Braga Portugal In addition many of the district s treasures and historical artifacts are housed in several museums that are scattered throughout the city such as Museum of the Biscainhos Portuguese Museu dos Biscainhos housed in the historical Palace of the Biscainhos the museum exhibits a permanent collection of decorative art that includes furniture ceramics European and Oriental porcelain European Glass European and Portuguese watches and clocks Treasure Museum of the Se Cathedral Portuguese Tesouro Museu da Se Catedral the collection varies but collects together artefacts from the 16th to 18th century during the period of religious cultural exploration associated with the cathedral including images and azulejo tiles Museum of Image Portuguese Museu da Imagem dedicated to photography located near the Arco da Porta Nova and Braga Castle Museum Medina Portuguese Museu Medina located in the same building as the Museum of Pius XII the collection is the home to the 83 oil paintings and 21 drawings of the painter Henrique Medina Museum of Nogueira da Silva Portuguese Museu Nogeuira da Silva bequeathed to the University of Minho the collection includes artefacts paintings furniture and sculptures collected over a lifetime such as Renaissance artwork 17th furniture ceramics and objects in ivory silver and religious art Museum of Pius XII Portuguese Museu Pio XII housing a collection of Palaeolithic Neolithic and Bronze Age implements Pre historic and Luso Roman pottery Dom Diogo de Sousa Museum Portuguese Museu D Diogo de Sousa its collection includes many items discovered during archaeological excavations within the municipality extending as far back as the Palaeolithic to the Middle Ages Museum of String Instruments Portuguese Museu dos Cordofones the collection features Portuguese instruments as far back as the Middle Ages including Cavaquinhos Portuguese guitars Mandolins and banjos among others Education Edit Circo Theatre Avenida da Liberdade Portugal The city is the headquarters and main campus for the Universidade do Minho Minho University a public university founded in 1973 A campus of Portugal s oldest private university of Portugal the Universidade Catolica Portuguesa was also established in 1967 as well as the Escola Secundaria Sa de Miranda the oldest Secondary school in Braga In the late 2000s the International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory also opened their international research centre in the city The Braga Pedagogical Farm is a farm dealing with animals and agriculture welcoming extra curricular activities from schools and visitors Sports Edit Estadio Municipal de Braga Braga s football team Sporting Clube de Braga was founded in 1921 and play in the top division of Portuguese football the Liga Portugal bwin from Braga Municipal Stadium carved out of the Monte Castro hill that overlooks the city Braga has had considerable success in recent years winning the Taca de Portugal Portuguese Cup for the second time in 2016 and the third in 2021 and reaching the Europa League final in 2011 which they lost to fellow Portuguese side FC Porto The Rampa da Falperra a round of the European Hillclimb Championship is held every year in the outskirts of the city The Circuito Vasco Sameiro and adjacent the Kartodromo Internacional de Braga are located around the local airfield The racing track held European Touring Car Cup events in 2009 and 2010 and the KIB has held rounds of the Karting World Championship Notable citizens Edit Paulo Orosio Statue of Manuel Gomes da Costa in Braga Public service Edit Avitus of Braga ca 440 AD produced a first person account of the miraculous finding of St Stephen s tomb Saint Ovidius martyred 135 AD third Bishop of Braga buried in the cathedral Saint Engratia venerated as a virgin martyr and saint tradition is that she was martyred with 18 companions in 303AD Paulus Orosius ca 383 ca 420 historian and theologue from the Braga diocese Hermeric died 441 landlord and then king of the Suebi with capital in Braga from at least 419 and possibly as early as 406 until his abdication in 438 Martin of Braga c 520 580 Bishop of Braga in 562 579 converted the Suebi to Catholicism Henry Count of Portugal 1066 1112 Count of Portugal 1093 1112 turned Braga into his capital Teresa of Leon Countess of Portugal 1080 1130 was married to Count Henry in 1094 Antipope Gregory VIII died 1137 born Mauritius Burdinus the second Archbishop of Braga D Paio Mendes died 1137 he was the Archbishop of Braga from 1118 to 1137 Pope John XXI ca 1215 1277 born Pedro Juliao Archbishop of Braga 1272 1275 elected Pope in 1276 Francisco Sanches ca 1550 ca 1623 a skeptic philosopher and physician of Sephardi Jewish origin Miguel de Carvalho 1579 1624 a Roman Catholic missionary was burned at the stake in Japan beatified in 1867 Manuel Antonio Martins 1772 1845 governor of Cape Verde and Portuguese Guinea 1833 to 1835 Joao Crisostomo de Amorim Pessoa 1810 1888 Bishop of Santiago de Cabo Verde and archbishop of Goa and Braga Manuel Gomes da Costa 1863 1929 an army officer and politician the tenth President of the Portuguese Republic and led the famous 28 May 1926 coup d etat in Braga Domingos Leite Pereira 1882 1956 Portuguese politician of the Portuguese First Republic Salgado Zenha 1923 1993 a Portuguese left wing politician and lawyer Ricardo Rio born 1972 an economist politician and current Mayor of Braga Arts amp Science Edit Carlos Amarante Gabriel Pereira de Castro 1571 1632 a priest lawyer and poet Joao Antunes 1642 1712 an important architect credited for introducing baroque architecture Andre Soares 1720 1769 architect of several important Rococo buildings in Braga area Carlos Amarante 1748 1815 an architect who favoured neoclassical architecture Adriano de Paiva 1847 1907 a scientist and pioneer of the telectroscope Elisio de Moura 1877 1977 a physician professor and leading psychiatrist Lucio Alberto Pinheiro dos Santos 1889 1950 philosopher coined the term rhythmanalysis Luis de Almeida Braga 1890 1970 a Portuguese writer and politician in the Integralismo Lusitano movement Antonio Variacoes 1944 1984 innovative pop composer and singer Torcato Sepulveda 1951 2008 an influential Portuguese newspaper journalist Sara Braga Simoes born 1975 an operatic sopranoSport Edit Emanuel Silva 2008 Carlos Carvalhal 1965 a former footballer with 259 club caps and manager of S C Braga Litos born 1974 a former footballer with 433 club caps Henrique born 1980 a former footballer with 451 club caps Pedro Pereira born 1984 a former footballer with over 460 club caps Emanuel Silva born 1985 a sprint canoeist and silver medallist at the 2012 Summer Olympics Carole Costa born 1990 a footballer with 133 caps for the Portuguese female national football team Julio Ferreira born 1994 a taekwondo practitioner Diogo Dalot born 1999 a footballer with Manchester United F C and 6 caps for PortugalInternational relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Portugal Braga is twinned with 35 Bissora Guinea Bissau Clermont Ferrand France Cluj Napoca Romania Cuenca Ecuador Ivano Frankivsk Ukraine Poggibonsi Italy Puteaux France Ribeira Brava Cape Verde Santa Fe Argentina Tarrafal de Sao Nicolau Cape VerdeSee also EditOrgan Festival of BragaReferences Edit Statistics Portugal www ine pt Retrieved 27 March 2018 Eurostat Archived 7 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Braga 2012 Capital Europeia da Juventude in Portuguese Braga Portugal 2012 archived from the original on 4 May 2012 retrieved 19 April 2012 Machado Jose Barbosa 1 January 2014 Introducao a Historia da Lingua e Cultura Portuguesas Edicoes Vercial ISBN 9789897001857 Retrieved 27 March 2018 via Google Books a b c d e f g h i j k l Marques Antonio Henrique R de Oliveira 1997 Historia de Portugal manual para uso de estudantes e outros curiosos de assuntos do passado patrio 13th ed Lisboa Presenca pp 43 44 ISBN 972 23 2189 7 OCLC 476465662 Thompson E A Romans and Barbarians The Decline of the Western Empire Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1982 ISBN 0 299 08700 X pp 153 154 Diaz Martinez Pablo de la Cruz 2011 El reino suevo 411 585 Tres Cantos Madrid Espana ISBN 978 84 460 3648 7 OCLC 958059531 Visigothic Spain new approaches Edward James Oxford Clarendon Press 1980 ISBN 0 19 822543 1 OCLC 5100979 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Wace Henry Piercy William Coleman eds 2014 A dictionary of early Christian biography and literature to the end of the sixth century A D with an account of the principal sects and heresies Peabody Mass Hendrickson Publ pp 1263 1264 ISBN 978 1 61970 269 1 Aranha Boaventura Maciel 1761 Cuidados da morte e descuidos da vida Com a addicao das prodigios as vidas dos dous mayores santos na officina de Francisco Borges de Sousa p 276 a b Cunha D Rodrigo da 1634 Primeira segunda parte da historia ecclesiastica dos arcebispos de Braga e dos Santos e Varoes illustres que florecerao neste arcebispado Por dom Rodrigo da Cunha arcebispo amp senhor de Braga primaz das Hespanhas in Portuguese Vol II pp 18 22 Menendez Pidal Ramon 1906 PRIMERA CRoNICA GENERAL ESTORIA DE ESPANA DE ALFONSO X 2022 ed Biblioteca Digital de Castilla y Leon p 357 Retrieved 10 June 2023 de Braga Bernardo 1843 da Silveira Pinto Albano Antero ed Tratado sobre a precedencia do Reino de Portugal ao Reino de Napoles Typogr da revista p 25 Cunha D Rodrigo da 1634 Primeira segunda parte da historia ecclesiastica dos arcebispos de Braga e dos Santos e Varoes illustres que florecerao neste arcebispado Por dom Rodrigo da Cunha arcebispo amp senhor de Braga primaz das Hespanhas in Portuguese Vol II pp 2 29 Bandeira Miguel 1993 O espaco urbano de Braga em meados do sec XVIII Revista da Faculdade de Letras Geografia IX 171 173 Portocarrero Gustavo 2010 Braga na Idade Moderna paisagem e identidade Tomar CEIPHAR pp 81 100 ISBN 978 972 95143 2 6 OCLC 733958410 Capela Jose Viriato 2003 As freguesias do distrito de Braga nas Memorias Paroquiais de 1758 a construcao do imaginario minhoto setecentista Pereira P Gomes 2009 Caracterizacao do Concelho de Braga Diagnostico do Concelho de Braga PDF in Portuguese Braga Portugal Unidade de Saude Publica de Braga archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 retrieved 21 March 2012 Normals Climatologicas Instituto de Meteorologia IPMA Retrieved 25 March 2015 a b c d e f g Census de 1991 2001 e Territorio em numeros de 2004 in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal INE Instituto Nacional de Estatistica 2004 retrieved 24 March 2012 0000200147 PDF DRE in European Portuguese Retrieved 29 December 2022 Diario da Republica Law nr 11 A 2013 pages 552 26 28 PDF in Portuguese Retrieved 18 July 2014 De Braga para o mundo a PRIMAVERA da cidade Alumni UMinho in European Portuguese Retrieved 3 March 2023 PRIMAVERA Business Software Solutions SA COTEC Portugal in European Portuguese Retrieved 3 March 2023 Aptiv 13 November 2019 Aptiv s Braga Technical Center retrieved 16 January 2021 Politikprominenz bei Bosch Bundeskanzlerin Merkel und Premier Costa eroffnen Tech Center in Portugal Bosch Media Service in German Retrieved 16 January 2021 Sereno Isabel Dordio Paulo 1994 SIPA ed 21 Marcos Miliarios serie Capela Braga incerta via v PT01130700002 in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Retrieved 26 February 2012 Sereno Isabel Dordio Paulo 1994 SIPA ed Termas romanas de Maximinos Alto da Cividade Colina dos Maximinos v PT010303070040 in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico retrieved 26 April 2012 Sereno Isabel Leao Miguel Basto Sonia 2010 SIPA ed Arco da Porta Nova Arco da Rua do Souto v PT01130700002 in Portuguese Lisbon SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Archived from the original on 17 March 2012 Retrieved 26 February 2012 Sereno Isabel Santos Joao 1994 SIPA ed Pelourinho de Braga IPA 00000207 PT010303520013 in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico archived from the original on 21 August 2016 retrieved 15 August 2016 Sereno Isabel Dordio Paulo Goncalves Joaquim 2007 SIPA ed Castelo de Braga designadamente a Torre de Menagem restos in Portuguese Lisbon SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Archived from the original on 12 November 2013 Retrieved 26 February 2012 Sereno Isabel Santos Joao 1994 SIPA ed Capela de Nossa Senhora da Conceicao Capela dos Coimbras Capela do Senhor Morto in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Archived from the original on 1 April 2012 Retrieved 26 February 2012 Sereno Isabel Dordio Paulo Goncalves Joaquim 2004 SIPA ed Capela de Sao Frutuoso de Montelios Capela de Sao Salvador de Montelios in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Centre UNESCO World Heritage Portugal UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 9 July 2019 Geminacoes cm braga pt in Portuguese Braga Archived from the original on 14 March 2016 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Bibliography EditSee also Timeline of Braga Bibliography Braga Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed 1911 pp 375 376 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Braga Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Braga Braga Portal Virtual Braga Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Braga amp oldid 1159593716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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