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Fort of Santa Cruz (Horta)

Fort of Santa Cruz (Portuguese: Forte de Santa Cruz da Horta or Castelo da Santa Cruz), is a 16th-century fortification located in the civil parish of Angústias, municipality of Horta, on the island of Faial in the Portuguese Azores. Occasionally referred to as the Castelo de Santa Cruz by locals, it is situated in the historic centre of the city, on the edge of Horta Bay. It was constructed to work in conjunction with the Fort of Bom Jesus (Portuguese: Forte do Bom Jesus)[1] at the mouth of the Ribeira da Conceição and Fort of Greta (Portuguese: Forte da Greta) along the coast of the extinct spatter cone Monte da Guia, to defend the entrance to the harbour and southern access to the Bay.

Fort of Santa Cruz
Forte de Santa Cruz
Faial, Azores in Portugal
The main walls of the Fort of Santa Cruz, as seen from Rua Vasco da Gama(Regional E.R.1-1ª)
Fort of Santa Cruz
Location of the Santa Cruz Fort within the municipality of Horta, island of Faial
Coordinates38°31′53.75″N 28°37′34.66″W / 38.5315972°N 28.6262944°W / 38.5315972; -28.6262944
TypeFort
Site information
OwnerCâmara Municipal de Horta
OperatorPousadas de Portugal
Open to
the public
Private
Site history
Builtc. 1567
MaterialsBasalt, Tuff

History edit

 
"Fayal", a map showing the assault by the Duke of Cumberland (September 1589)
 
A vista of the village of Horta (1842) showing the Bay defenses from the Fort of Santa Cruz to the Fort of Bom Jesus
 
The old seawalls of the fort, over time the fort has become part of the city
 
Interior "courtyard" of the fort, once the martially grounds for the garrison

A study of the defensive conditions of the archipelago of the Azores, from pirates and privateers, attracted by the riches of the ships returning from Africa, India and Brazil, began in the middle of the 16th century by the military engineer Bartolomeu Ferraz. In his plan to the Portuguese Crown, Ferraz warned of the vulnerability of the islands of São Miguel, Terceira, São Jorge, Faial and Pico to pirate attacks or Protestant military forces. His plan justified the need to improve the security conditions at the ports and protect ships in Azorean waters:

"... because the three islands import a lot...and [for they] principally aid the carracks from India and [because] the French against reason, justly or injustly, take everything they can..."[2]

During the reigns of Kings John III (1521–1557) and Sebastian (1568–1578), along with new regiments sent to the region, military architect Tommaso Benedetto was sent to reformulate the defenses (in 1567), during the regency of Cardinal Henry, King of Portugal. Benedetto understood that with a determined maritime force, the defense of the islands could be concentrated at ports and anchorages, by the local population and under the responsibility of the municipal authorities.

Primitively referred to as the Castelo de Santo António nu lugar da Cruz (because of the chapel located within its walls),[3] the fort that would be known as Santa Cruz, was planned-out during Benedetto's visit in 1567, which also included the stationing of an artillery company on its grounds. Its construction was unlikely to have taken long: in fact, a Royal order for the director of Public Works, Luís Gonçalves, obligated him to visit the islands of Faial and São Jorge to get those projects completed.

Subordinate to the administrative authority of Terceira, Horta was ever fearful of attacks; the Battle of Salga (1581), led the military to strengthen the fortifications along the coast of Faial, repairing existing defences and constructing new battlements. During the Iberian Union crisis (1583), Santa Cruz defended Horta from a Spanish armada under the command of Pedro de Toledo, who disembarked in the nearby village of Pasteleiro. After marching from their beachhead to the village of Horta, the Spaniards attacked and defeated the regiment, eventually capturing and executing the Captain-major António Guedes de Sousa at the doors of the fort. The Spanish garrison was recalled to Terceira, when the local population complained that they could not support nor lodge the occupying armada. Ironically, this was a regrettable decision: on 6 September 1589 an English fleet, under the command of George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland as part of his Azores Voyage of 1589, arrived in Horta harbour, captured a carrack from India and seven other ships at the port, and attacked the village, sacking the buildings and forcing the residents to flee into the interior. When they attacked the fort, the building was defended by seven soldiers, the vicar and captains Gaspar Dutra, Tomás Porrás, Domingos Fernandes and João Francisco. The privateers took all the artillery pieces that they encountered on the island (except two that they did not find in Porto Pim) and burned down buildings within the fort.[4] Repaired, but with insufficient artillery, the military regiment could do little but prevent ships from off-loading their forces. This was the case in August 1597, when Walter Raleigh and his men attacked, sacked and set the village of Horta aflame, during the campaigns of Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex.

After 1650, and until the second half of the 20th century, the fort served to house and garrison a small number of troops from the Horta garrison.

At the time John Bass Dabney arrived in 1805, the fort extended into the harbour, and alongside, the fishermen (when not out with their boats) used to gather on the small quay to gossip.[5] As U.S. Counsel General to the Western Islands, Dabney was there and participated covertly in the events leading to the destruction of the U.S. privateer General Armstrong in the Bay of Horta by British ships during the War of 1812. Dabney suggested to its captain that the Armstrong should hover within the guns of the "castle", intent on coercing the Portuguese in the fort to break neutrality and fire on the British in defense.[6] Regardless, after an initial assault by 14 British longboats, the British ship H.M.S. Carnation fired on, then her men set flame to the Armstrong as its crew abandoned ship to their enemy. During the course of the battles houses were damaged in Horta, and people killed or injured.[7] The legal implications of the events extended for 36 years: the ships owners, upon not obtaining reparations for the sinking of the Armstrong turned to Portugal, who they believed, that the military in the Fort of Santa Cruz should have defended, since the ship was in a supposedly safe, neutral harbour.[8] Considering the age and condition of the fortress at this time, it was highly unlikely and futile.[9]

During the Portuguese Liberal Revolution (1821), the residents of Faial were hesitant to rebel (given the reign of terror on Terceira, where Governor Stockler annulled changes, demanded an oath to the King and arresting liberal).[10] A month later (May 12) when British ships arrived, its officers were permitted to visit the local Governor and, with a group of prominent citizens, was convinced to adopt the liberal system: cheering in the streets were accompanied by salvos from the Fort.[10] The fort was later taken by the forces loyal to Peter IV, as his regency attempted to take the Azores as a stepping stone to retake the throne from his absolutist brother Miguel.

In 1927 the fort's title was transferred to the Câmara Municipal of Horta, where it was to be demolished in order to make way for the coastal avenue (then in the planning stages and that supporters insisted would break the continuity of such a project).[11] Members of the Junta Geral of the District had suggested transferring the fort stone-for-stone to Monte da Guia, in order to maintain "progress" in the district.[11][12] Others, like Osório Golourt,[13] Marcelino Lima,[14] Sarmento Rodrigues and Augusto Arruda promoted maintenance, rehabilitation or even a tunnel beneath the structure.[11] But, the lack of funds impeded this project and the fort was spared from demolition. By decree, the fort was classified as a national monument (No.36 383) on 28 June 1947.[11]

Much later, the building was re-purposed as part of the network of Pousadas de Portugal, a project of the Direcção-Geral dos Edifícios e Monumentos Nacionais (DGEMN) (General-Directorate for Buildings and National Monuments), officially re-opened as a hostel on 9 August 1969, and designed by architect Alberto Cruz.[15] Critics at the time found that this project, which involved the construction of rooms for visitors, lounge and services, destroyed the existing historical structure: only the defensive exterior walls and chapel remained intact. The 20th century remodelling and renovation, at a cost of 3.9 thousand Euros was completed by Enatur and Grupo Pestana Pousadas. On 18 June 2004, the Pousada began to operate under the "Pousadas de Charme" designation, followed on 23 September by the official inauguration, presented by the Minister of Tourism, Telmo Correia.[16][17] Since its re-purposing the Fort has been referred to locally as the Pousada de Santa Cruz, Pousada de Horta or Estalagem de Santa Cruz.

Architecture edit

 
The main gate/portal of the fort and Pousada hostel
 
The Chapel of Santo António, within the walls of the fort

Originally, the fort was anchored on a rocky shoreline that extended into the harbour and surrounded by a narrow strip of beach sand on either side, with a small dock on its southern lateral wall (called theCais da Alfândega, or Customs wharf).[15] The principal entrance, localized on the land (to the west) fronts Rua Vasco da Gama (Regional E.R.1-1ª), is marked by a large portal with coat-of-arms. Another access, but of more recent construction, is located along the side facing the harbour: a narrow doorway with rounded corridor that bisects the walls and opens to the fort's esplanade.[15]

The pentagonal-shape bastion fortress, with an area of 3650 metres, was constructed of basalt rock and tuff (the latter primary in the construction of the battlements and bartizans. While two bartizans and one bastion guards access to the sea, two bastions on the extreme corners (northwest and southwest) are oriented towards the land to protect overland invasions.[15]

The original plan included a baluarte structures and several dependent buildings: commander's house, barracks, gunpowder magazine, storehouses, bastille and kitchen.[15]

At its maximum effectiveness, the fort included 20 pieces of artillery and had banquettes to support a garrison of Fusiliers.[15]

The Chapel of Santo António, located along the southern wall of the fort, the chapel is a simple semi-rectangular building constructed of basalt and painted in white (with the exception of the stone cornices, the door- and window-frames and base).[15] The Chapel of Santo António was built in order to support the local garrison: its interior, although simple, was covered in artistic azulejo tile.[15]

After its remodelling, the pousada included 28 rooms and two suites, restaurant with esplanade, bar, conference and reading room (in addition to pool) was created from the main garrison's barracks.[16]

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ The Bom Jesus Fort was demolished in the 1940s to make way for the extension of the Avenida Marginal and the local tribunal.
  2. ^ Arquivo dos Açores (1981), p.366
  3. ^ Osório Goulart (1957), p.171
  4. ^ Letter from Captain-major Gaspar Gonçalves Dutra, Arquivo dos Açores (1981), p. 304)
  5. ^ Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.26-27
  6. ^ Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.71
  7. ^ Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.76
  8. ^ Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.79-80
  9. ^ Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.80
  10. ^ a b Joseph C. Adbo (2005), p.101
  11. ^ a b c d Fernando Faria Ribeira (2007), p.151
  12. ^ Conferencia Económica do Distrito da Horta, 1939, Edição Junta Geral, Horta, 1939, pp.127-128
  13. ^ Osório Goulart, Correio da Horta (14 January 1956), 7-041, p.1
  14. ^ Marcelino Lima Anais do Município da Horta, p.308
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h "Castelo de Santa Cruz", (in Portuguese), Angra do Heroísmo (Azores), Portugal: Dirreção Regional da Cultura/Instituto Açoriano de Cultura, 3 March 1999, archived from the original on 18 March 2012, retrieved 30 June 2011
  16. ^ a b Nóe, Paulo (2003). SIPA (ed.). "Forte de Santa Cruz/Pousada da Horta" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico.
  17. ^ JN, ed. (25 September 2004), Ministro do Turismo inaugurou pousada (in Portuguese), Horta (Azores), Portugal: Jornal de Notícias, p. 35
Sources
  • Abdo, Joseph C. (2005). On the Edge of History. Lisbon, Portugal: Gab. Artes Gráficas, Lda. ISBN 972-99858-0-4.
  • Barreira, C.G. (1995), Um Olhar sobre a Cidade da Horta (in Portuguese), Horta (Azores), Portugal: Núcleo Cultural da Horta
  • Bastos, Barão de (1997), "Relação dos fortes, Castellos e outros pontos fortificados que devem ser conservados para defeza permanente (Arquivo Histórico Militar)", Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. LV, Angra do Heroísmo (Azores), Portugal: Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira
  • Carita, Rui (1995), "Arquitectura Militar nos Açores: ilha do Faial, iconografia e informação dos Arquivos Militares", O Faial e a Periferia Açoriana nos Séculos XV a XIX, Horta (Azores), Portugal: Núcleo Cultural da Horta, pp. 161–173
  • Faria, Manuel (1998), "Tombos dos Fortes da Ilha do Faial", Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. LVI, pp. 91–133
  • Ferreira, A. M.P. (1995), "Ingleses atacam o Faial", O Faial e a Periferia Açoriana nos Séculos XV a XIX, Horta (Azores), Portugal: Núcleo Cultural da Horta, pp. 109–113
  • Goulart, O. (1957), "Monografia do Castelo de Santa Cruz da Cidade da Horta", Boletim do Núcleo Cultural da Horta (in Portuguese), vol. 1, Horta (Azores), Portugal, pp. 169–182{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Lima, Marcelino de (1940), História da Ilha do Faial (in Portuguese), Famelicão, Portugal{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Linschoten, J. H. (1997), Itinerário, Viagens ou Navegação para as Índias Orientais ou Portuguesa (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Comissão Nacional para as Comemorações dos Descobrimentos Portugueses, p. 343
  • Macedo, António Lourenço da Silveira (1981), História das Quatro Ilhas Que Formam o Distrito da Horta [Reimp. fac-simil. da ed. de 1871] (in Portuguese), vol. I–II, Angra do Heroísmo (Azores), Portugal: Secretaria Regional da Educação e Cultura
  • Machado, Francisco Xavier (1998), "Revista aos Fortes das Ilhas do Faial e Pico (Arquivo Histórico Ultramarino)", Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. LVI, Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira
  • Neves, Carlos; Caravalho, Filipe (1992), "Documentação sobre as Fortificações dos Açores existentes nos Arquivos de Lisboa –Catálogo", in Matos, Arthur Teodoro de (ed.), Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. L, Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira
  • Pego, Damião (1998), "Tombos dos Fortes das Ilhas do Faial, São Jorge e Graciosa (Direcção dos Serviços de Engenharia do Exército)", Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. LVI, Angra do Heroísmo (Azores); Portugal: Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira
  • Ribeiro, Fernando Faria (2007). Em Dias Passados: Figuras, Instituições e Acontecimentos da História Faialense (in Portuguese). Horta (Azores), Portugal: Nucleu Cultural da Horta.
  • Vieira, Alberto (1987), "Da poliorcética à fortificação nos Açores: introdução ao estudo do sistema defensivo nos Açores nos séculos XVI-XIX", Boletim do Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira (in Portuguese), vol. XLV (II ed.), Angra do Heroísmo (Azores), Portugal: Instituto Histórico da Ilha Terceira
  • Weston, F. S. (1975–1979), "A Incursão inglesa de 1589", Boletim do Núcleo Cultural da Horta, vol. 6, Núcleo Cultural da Horta, pp. 107–111

External links edit

  • Pousadas de Portugal Website on the Fort of Santa Cruz

fort, santa, cruz, horta, fort, santa, cruz, portuguese, forte, santa, cruz, horta, castelo, santa, cruz, 16th, century, fortification, located, civil, parish, angústias, municipality, horta, island, faial, portuguese, azores, occasionally, referred, castelo, . Fort of Santa Cruz Portuguese Forte de Santa Cruz da Horta or Castelo da Santa Cruz is a 16th century fortification located in the civil parish of Angustias municipality of Horta on the island of Faial in the Portuguese Azores Occasionally referred to as the Castelo de Santa Cruz by locals it is situated in the historic centre of the city on the edge of Horta Bay It was constructed to work in conjunction with the Fort of Bom Jesus Portuguese Forte do Bom Jesus 1 at the mouth of the Ribeira da Conceicao and Fort of Greta Portuguese Forte da Greta along the coast of the extinct spatter cone Monte da Guia to defend the entrance to the harbour and southern access to the Bay Fort of Santa CruzForte de Santa CruzFaial Azores in PortugalThe main walls of the Fort of Santa Cruz as seen from Rua Vasco da Gama Regional E R 1 1ª Fort of Santa CruzLocation of the Santa Cruz Fort within the municipality of Horta island of FaialCoordinates38 31 53 75 N 28 37 34 66 W 38 5315972 N 28 6262944 W 38 5315972 28 6262944TypeFortSite informationOwnerCamara Municipal de HortaOperatorPousadas de PortugalOpen tothe publicPrivateSite historyBuiltc 1567MaterialsBasalt Tuff Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 References 4 External linksHistory edit nbsp Fayal a map showing the assault by the Duke of Cumberland September 1589 nbsp A vista of the village of Horta 1842 showing the Bay defenses from the Fort of Santa Cruz to the Fort of Bom Jesus nbsp The old seawalls of the fort over time the fort has become part of the city nbsp Interior courtyard of the fort once the martially grounds for the garrison A study of the defensive conditions of the archipelago of the Azores from pirates and privateers attracted by the riches of the ships returning from Africa India and Brazil began in the middle of the 16th century by the military engineer Bartolomeu Ferraz In his plan to the Portuguese Crown Ferraz warned of the vulnerability of the islands of Sao Miguel Terceira Sao Jorge Faial and Pico to pirate attacks or Protestant military forces His plan justified the need to improve the security conditions at the ports and protect ships in Azorean waters because the three islands import a lot and for they principally aid the carracks from India and because the French against reason justly or injustly take everything they can 2 During the reigns of Kings John III 1521 1557 and Sebastian 1568 1578 along with new regiments sent to the region military architect Tommaso Benedetto was sent to reformulate the defenses in 1567 during the regency of Cardinal Henry King of Portugal Benedetto understood that with a determined maritime force the defense of the islands could be concentrated at ports and anchorages by the local population and under the responsibility of the municipal authorities Primitively referred to as the Castelo de Santo Antonio nu lugar da Cruz because of the chapel located within its walls 3 the fort that would be known as Santa Cruz was planned out during Benedetto s visit in 1567 which also included the stationing of an artillery company on its grounds Its construction was unlikely to have taken long in fact a Royal order for the director of Public Works Luis Goncalves obligated him to visit the islands of Faial and Sao Jorge to get those projects completed Subordinate to the administrative authority of Terceira Horta was ever fearful of attacks the Battle of Salga 1581 led the military to strengthen the fortifications along the coast of Faial repairing existing defences and constructing new battlements During the Iberian Union crisis 1583 Santa Cruz defended Horta from a Spanish armada under the command of Pedro de Toledo who disembarked in the nearby village of Pasteleiro After marching from their beachhead to the village of Horta the Spaniards attacked and defeated the regiment eventually capturing and executing the Captain major Antonio Guedes de Sousa at the doors of the fort The Spanish garrison was recalled to Terceira when the local population complained that they could not support nor lodge the occupying armada Ironically this was a regrettable decision on 6 September 1589 an English fleet under the command of George Clifford 3rd Earl of Cumberland as part of his Azores Voyage of 1589 arrived in Horta harbour captured a carrack from India and seven other ships at the port and attacked the village sacking the buildings and forcing the residents to flee into the interior When they attacked the fort the building was defended by seven soldiers the vicar and captains Gaspar Dutra Tomas Porras Domingos Fernandes and Joao Francisco The privateers took all the artillery pieces that they encountered on the island except two that they did not find in Porto Pim and burned down buildings within the fort 4 Repaired but with insufficient artillery the military regiment could do little but prevent ships from off loading their forces This was the case in August 1597 when Walter Raleigh and his men attacked sacked and set the village of Horta aflame during the campaigns of Robert Devereux 2nd Earl of Essex After 1650 and until the second half of the 20th century the fort served to house and garrison a small number of troops from the Horta garrison At the time John Bass Dabney arrived in 1805 the fort extended into the harbour and alongside the fishermen when not out with their boats used to gather on the small quay to gossip 5 As U S Counsel General to the Western Islands Dabney was there and participated covertly in the events leading to the destruction of the U S privateer General Armstrong in the Bay of Horta by British ships during the War of 1812 Dabney suggested to its captain that the Armstrong should hover within the guns of the castle intent on coercing the Portuguese in the fort to break neutrality and fire on the British in defense 6 Regardless after an initial assault by 14 British longboats the British ship H M S Carnation fired on then her men set flame to the Armstrong as its crew abandoned ship to their enemy During the course of the battles houses were damaged in Horta and people killed or injured 7 The legal implications of the events extended for 36 years the ships owners upon not obtaining reparations for the sinking of the Armstrong turned to Portugal who they believed that the military in the Fort of Santa Cruz should have defended since the ship was in a supposedly safe neutral harbour 8 Considering the age and condition of the fortress at this time it was highly unlikely and futile 9 During the Portuguese Liberal Revolution 1821 the residents of Faial were hesitant to rebel given the reign of terror on Terceira where Governor Stockler annulled changes demanded an oath to the King and arresting liberal 10 A month later May 12 when British ships arrived its officers were permitted to visit the local Governor and with a group of prominent citizens was convinced to adopt the liberal system cheering in the streets were accompanied by salvos from the Fort 10 The fort was later taken by the forces loyal to Peter IV as his regency attempted to take the Azores as a stepping stone to retake the throne from his absolutist brother Miguel In 1927 the fort s title was transferred to the Camara Municipal of Horta where it was to be demolished in order to make way for the coastal avenue then in the planning stages and that supporters insisted would break the continuity of such a project 11 Members of the Junta Geral of the District had suggested transferring the fort stone for stone to Monte da Guia in order to maintain progress in the district 11 12 Others like Osorio Golourt 13 Marcelino Lima 14 Sarmento Rodrigues and Augusto Arruda promoted maintenance rehabilitation or even a tunnel beneath the structure 11 But the lack of funds impeded this project and the fort was spared from demolition By decree the fort was classified as a national monument No 36 383 on 28 June 1947 11 Much later the building was re purposed as part of the network of Pousadas de Portugal a project of the Direccao Geral dos Edificios e Monumentos Nacionais DGEMN General Directorate for Buildings and National Monuments officially re opened as a hostel on 9 August 1969 and designed by architect Alberto Cruz 15 Critics at the time found that this project which involved the construction of rooms for visitors lounge and services destroyed the existing historical structure only the defensive exterior walls and chapel remained intact The 20th century remodelling and renovation at a cost of 3 9 thousand Euros was completed by Enatur and Grupo Pestana Pousadas On 18 June 2004 the Pousada began to operate under the Pousadas de Charme designation followed on 23 September by the official inauguration presented by the Minister of Tourism Telmo Correia 16 17 Since its re purposing the Fort has been referred to locally as the Pousada de Santa Cruz Pousada de Horta or Estalagem de Santa Cruz Architecture edit nbsp The main gate portal of the fort and Pousada hostel nbsp The Chapel of Santo Antonio within the walls of the fort Originally the fort was anchored on a rocky shoreline that extended into the harbour and surrounded by a narrow strip of beach sand on either side with a small dock on its southern lateral wall called theCais da Alfandega or Customs wharf 15 The principal entrance localized on the land to the west fronts Rua Vasco da Gama Regional E R 1 1ª is marked by a large portal with coat of arms Another access but of more recent construction is located along the side facing the harbour a narrow doorway with rounded corridor that bisects the walls and opens to the fort s esplanade 15 The pentagonal shape bastion fortress with an area of 3650 metres was constructed of basalt rock and tuff the latter primary in the construction of the battlements and bartizans While two bartizans and one bastion guards access to the sea two bastions on the extreme corners northwest and southwest are oriented towards the land to protect overland invasions 15 The original plan included a baluarte structures and several dependent buildings commander s house barracks gunpowder magazine storehouses bastille and kitchen 15 At its maximum effectiveness the fort included 20 pieces of artillery and had banquettes to support a garrison of Fusiliers 15 The Chapel of Santo Antonio located along the southern wall of the fort the chapel is a simple semi rectangular building constructed of basalt and painted in white with the exception of the stone cornices the door and window frames and base 15 The Chapel of Santo Antonio was built in order to support the local garrison its interior although simple was covered in artistic azulejo tile 15 After its remodelling the pousada included 28 rooms and two suites restaurant with esplanade bar conference and reading room in addition to pool was created from the main garrison s barracks 16 References editNotes The Bom Jesus Fort was demolished in the 1940s to make way for the extension of the Avenida Marginal and the local tribunal Arquivo dos Acores 1981 p 366 Osorio Goulart 1957 p 171 Letter from Captain major Gaspar Goncalves Dutra Arquivo dos Acores 1981 p 304 Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 26 27 Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 71 Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 76 Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 79 80 Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 80 a b Joseph C Adbo 2005 p 101 a b c d Fernando Faria Ribeira 2007 p 151 Conferencia Economica do Distrito da Horta 1939 Edicao Junta Geral Horta 1939 pp 127 128 Osorio Goulart Correio da Horta 14 January 1956 7 041 p 1 Marcelino Lima Anais do Municipio da Horta p 308 a b c d e f g h Castelo de Santa Cruz Inventorio do Patrimonio Imovel dos Acores Faial in Portuguese Angra do Heroismo Azores Portugal Dirrecao Regional da Cultura Instituto Acoriano de Cultura 3 March 1999 archived from the original on 18 March 2012 retrieved 30 June 2011 a b Noe Paulo 2003 SIPA ed Forte de Santa Cruz Pousada da Horta in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico JN ed 25 September 2004 Ministro do Turismo inaugurou pousada in Portuguese Horta Azores Portugal Jornal de Noticias p 35 Sources Abdo Joseph C 2005 On the Edge of History Lisbon Portugal Gab Artes Graficas Lda ISBN 972 99858 0 4 Barreira C G 1995 Um Olhar sobre a Cidade da Horta in Portuguese Horta Azores Portugal Nucleo Cultural da Horta Bastos Barao de 1997 Relacao dos fortes Castellos e outros pontos fortificados que devem ser conservados para defeza permanente Arquivo Historico Militar Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol LV Angra do Heroismo Azores Portugal Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira Carita Rui 1995 Arquitectura Militar nos Acores ilha do Faial iconografia e informacao dos Arquivos Militares O Faial e a Periferia Acoriana nos Seculos XV a XIX Horta Azores Portugal Nucleo Cultural da Horta pp 161 173 Faria Manuel 1998 Tombos dos Fortes da Ilha do Faial Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol LVI pp 91 133 Ferreira A M P 1995 Ingleses atacam o Faial O Faial e a Periferia Acoriana nos Seculos XV a XIX Horta Azores Portugal Nucleo Cultural da Horta pp 109 113 Goulart O 1957 Monografia do Castelo de Santa Cruz da Cidade da Horta Boletim do Nucleo Cultural da Horta in Portuguese vol 1 Horta Azores Portugal pp 169 182 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lima Marcelino de 1940 Historia da Ilha do Faial in Portuguese Famelicao Portugal a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Linschoten J H 1997 Itinerario Viagens ou Navegacao para as Indias Orientais ou Portuguesa in Portuguese Lisbon Portugal Comissao Nacional para as Comemoracoes dos Descobrimentos Portugueses p 343 Macedo Antonio Lourenco da Silveira 1981 Historia das Quatro Ilhas Que Formam o Distrito da Horta Reimp fac simil da ed de 1871 in Portuguese vol I II Angra do Heroismo Azores Portugal Secretaria Regional da Educacao e Cultura Machado Francisco Xavier 1998 Revista aos Fortes das Ilhas do Faial e Pico Arquivo Historico Ultramarino Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol LVI Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira Neves Carlos Caravalho Filipe 1992 Documentacao sobre as Fortificacoes dos Acores existentes nos Arquivos de Lisboa Catalogo in Matos Arthur Teodoro de ed Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol L Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira Pego Damiao 1998 Tombos dos Fortes das Ilhas do Faial Sao Jorge e Graciosa Direccao dos Servicos de Engenharia do Exercito Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol LVI Angra do Heroismo Azores Portugal Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira Ribeiro Fernando Faria 2007 Em Dias Passados Figuras Instituicoes e Acontecimentos da Historia Faialense in Portuguese Horta Azores Portugal Nucleu Cultural da Horta Vieira Alberto 1987 Da poliorcetica a fortificacao nos Acores introducao ao estudo do sistema defensivo nos Acores nos seculos XVI XIX Boletim do Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira in Portuguese vol XLV II ed Angra do Heroismo Azores Portugal Instituto Historico da Ilha Terceira Weston F S 1975 1979 A Incursao inglesa de 1589 Boletim do Nucleo Cultural da Horta vol 6 Nucleo Cultural da Horta pp 107 111External links editPousadas de Portugal Website on the Fort of Santa Cruz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort of Santa Cruz Horta amp oldid 1177462952, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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