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Guarda, Portugal

Guarda (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈɡwaɾðɐ] ) is a city and a municipality in the District of Guarda and the capital of the Beiras e Serra da Estrela sub-region in central Portugal. The population in 2021 was 40,126,[1] in an area of 712.10 square kilometres (274.94 sq mi)[2] with 31,224 inhabitants in the city proper in 2006.[3] Founded by King Sancho I in 1199,[4] Guarda is the city located at the highest altitude in Portugal (1,056 m (3,465 ft) a.s.l.)[5] and one of the most important cities in the Portuguese region of Beira Alta. Serra da Estrela, the highest mountain range in continental Portugal, is partially located in the district. The city is served by national and international trains on the Beira Alta and Baixa railway lines. The present mayor is Sérgio Costa, as an independent. The municipal holiday is November 27.

Guarda
View of Guarda, Cathedral, City hall, Church and Mercy Building, Statue of King Sancho I, Old arch
Coordinates: 40°32′N 7°20′W / 40.533°N 7.333°W / 40.533; -7.333
Country Portugal
RegionCentro
Intermunic. comm.Beiras e Serra da Estrela
DistrictGuarda
Parishes43
Government
 • PresidentSérgio Costa
Area
 • Total712.10 km2 (274.94 sq mi)
Elevation
1,056 m (3,465 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total40,126
 • Density56/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC±00:00 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+01:00 (WEST)
Local holidayNovember 27
Websitehttp://www.mun-guarda.pt

Guarda is known as the "city of the five F's": Farta, Forte, Fria, Fiel e Formosa - abundant (or totally satisfied), strong, cold, loyal and beautiful.[6] The explanation of the five F's is as follows:

  • Farta (abundant), due to the fertility of the lands of the Mondego River valley;
  • Forte (strong), because the castle tower, the walls and its geographical location demonstrate its strength;
  • Fria (cold), due to its proximity to Serra da Estrela;
  • Fiel (loyal), because the Captain General of the Castle Guard, Álvaro Gil Cabral, Pedro Álvares Cabral's great-great-grandfather, refused to hand over the keys to the city to the King of Castile during the Crisis of 1383-1385 and still had the strength to participate in the Battle of Aljubarrota;
  • Formosa (beautiful), for the natural beauty of the urban nucleus.[7][8]

Geography edit

Guarda is the largest city in its district, capital of the Guarda District and the Beira Interior Norte Subregion within the Centro Region. The municipality is bordered by Pinhel to the north, to the east by Almeida, to the southeast by Sabugal, to the south by Belmonte and Covilhã, to the west by Manteigas and Gouveia, and to the northwest by Celorico da Beira.

Guarda is the highest city in continental Portugal (altitude 1,056 m), located to the northeast of Serra da Estrela (the largest mountain in mainland Portugal). The main attraction in Guarda is its cathedral, known as the Sé da Guarda. Guarda is a diocese of the same name.

Guarda railway station is served by the railway line Linha da Beira Alta, with international services towards Salamanca and Madrid, and domestic services to Pinhel, Vila Franca das Naves/Trancoso, Celorico da Beira, Gouveia, Nelas, Carregal do Sal, Santa Comba Dão, Mortagua, Luso/Buçaco and Pampilhosa. The station at Guarda has (2013) eighteen daily arrivals and departures of passenger trains and there is a small freight terminal. The section of the Linha da Beira Baixa which runs from Guarda through Belmonte/Sabugal, Covilhã, Fundão, Castelo Branco and Abrantes to Entroncamento is operating again, having been closed in 2010 between Guarda and Covilhã.

The main motorways are A25 (Aveiro, Viseu, Guarda, Vilar Formoso) and A23 (Guarda, Covilhã, Fundão, Castelo Branco, Abrantes, Torres Novas). Numerous motorcoach (long distance bus) services use these motorways to link Guarda with Porto, Lisbon and other Portuguese cities.

Guarda is the antipode to Pūponga in New Zealand.

Climate edit

Guarda has a cool Mediterranean climate[9] (Köppen: Csb) with some oceanic influences. It has lower average temperatures than most climates of this subtype, in part due to its high altitude. Winters are cool and wet and summers are warm and dry. Out of all district capitals of Portugal, it is the one that experiences the most snowfall on average, averaging about 12 days per year.[10]

Climate data for Guarda, Portugal, 1981-2010 normals, altitude: 1,019 m (3,343 ft)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.2
(59.4)
17.6
(63.7)
23.0
(73.4)
24.5
(76.1)
30.8
(87.4)
33.7
(92.7)
38.3
(100.9)
34.6
(94.3)
36.0
(96.8)
27.0
(80.6)
21.3
(70.3)
15.8
(60.4)
38.3
(100.9)
Average high °C (°F) 6.8
(44.2)
8.6
(47.5)
11.4
(52.5)
12.4
(54.3)
16.4
(61.5)
21.2
(70.2)
25.1
(77.2)
25.0
(77.0)
21.1
(70.0)
15.0
(59.0)
10.0
(50.0)
7.8
(46.0)
15.0
(59.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.0
(39.2)
5.4
(41.7)
7.6
(45.7)
8.5
(47.3)
12.0
(53.6)
16.3
(61.3)
19.5
(67.1)
19.5
(67.1)
16.5
(61.7)
11.6
(52.9)
7.5
(45.5)
5.4
(41.7)
11.1
(52.1)
Average low °C (°F) 1.2
(34.2)
2.3
(36.1)
3.7
(38.7)
4.6
(40.3)
7.7
(45.9)
11.3
(52.3)
14.0
(57.2)
13.9
(57.0)
11.9
(53.4)
8.3
(46.9)
5.0
(41.0)
2.9
(37.2)
7.2
(45.0)
Record low °C (°F) −10.8
(12.6)
−6.2
(20.8)
−8.0
(17.6)
−3.8
(25.2)
−1.8
(28.8)
1.2
(34.2)
4.4
(39.9)
6.0
(42.8)
3.5
(38.3)
−0.6
(30.9)
−7.5
(18.5)
−6.7
(19.9)
−10.8
(12.6)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 104.8
(4.13)
71.2
(2.80)
59.4
(2.34)
86.7
(3.41)
86.3
(3.40)
33.9
(1.33)
18.2
(0.72)
10.4
(0.41)
58.2
(2.29)
107.4
(4.23)
127.1
(5.00)
150.6
(5.93)
914.2
(35.99)
Source: Instituto de Meteorologia[11]

Toponym edit

 
Sé Cathedral and the statue of Dom Sancho I.

For a long time historians believed that the civitas Igaeditanorum (Egitania) was located in Guarda, but more recently it has been established that this location was in Idanha-a-Velha, in Beira Baixa. It was from here that the gentile "egitanian", in relation to the natives of the city, took root. Bordering the lands of the igaeditani, north of Guarda, were the lands of the Lancians Oppidani whose capital, the civitas Lancia Oppidana, was referred to as being located a short distance from the current location of Guarda. This theory was fiercely defended by General João de Almeida (influential Portuguese military man, hero of the African campaigns, native of Guarda), which has led some critics to disparage it. However, all the following investigations indicate its veracity. The place name "Guarda" may have been a derivation of a fortress overlooking the Mondego River, the Castro Tintinolho, whose place was called "Ward" by the Visigoths.[12][13]

History edit

 
Porta do Sol.

Prehistory edit

There is evidence of a meteorite impact in the region, northeast of Guarda, with about 35 km in diameter. Some pre-Ordovician evidence (from the Cambrian period, the earliest Phanerozoic epoch) is present.[14]

From the Neolithic to the Christian Reconquest edit

 
Main tower of the Castle of Guarda

In the first centuries of the Romanization of the Iberian Peninsula, Lusitanian tribes lived in the Guarda region. These tribes included, namely, the Igaeditani, the Lancienses Oppidani, and the Transcudani. These peoples, united under a true federation, resisted Romanization for two centuries. Unlike the Latinized towns, these towns did not consume wine, but instead, acorn beer. His weapon of choice was the falcata: a curved sword, which easily broke Roman swords due to its metallurgical superiority. Their pagan gods also differed from the Romans. Some Lusitanian religious inscriptions can still be found in some sanctuaries such as Cabeço de Fráguas.[8] It is argued that the ancestral town of Castelos Velhos, from the Iron Age, was located in the current city of Guarda.[15]

Although there are doubts about the place of birth, the Lusitanian warrior Viriathus (hero of Portuguese history to the present day) could have been born in the Guarda region in the "Herminios Mountains", corresponding to the current Serra da Estrela. Other historians suggest that he may have been born closer to the Portuguese coast.[16][17][16][18] His death by murder by traitors paid by Caepio, Roman consul and military man who participated in the Lusitanian War, occurred in Cabeço de Fráguas, in the current municipality of Guarda, in 139 or 138 BC.[19][20][21][22][19]

After Roman times, the period of occupation by the Visigoths followed. Later, the region was occupied by the Islamic civilization and by the Kingdom of Asturias. Only after the process of the Christian reconquest was its jurisdiction granted, which definitely confirmed the importance of the city and the region.[23]

Burgundy dynasty edit

In 1199 Sancho I of Portugal transferred the diocese of Egitania (modern day Idanha-a-Velha) to Guarda,[24] while granting the city a charter that was based on the short charter of Salamanca.[25] Situated high up, the city had a remarkable defensive and strategic importance.[5] The Jewish quarter of the city, which already had some importance back in the 13th century among the communities of the kingdom of Portugal, was between 600 and 850 people in the 15th century, and hosted a significant number Jews expelled from Spain in 1492.[5]

In 1202 the diocese of Guarda was created, transferred from Idanha, the ancient and important Egitanian Roman city,[26] which was largely abandoned during the time of the invasions and wars against the Moors (Muslims), since, according to the legends, its situation on the border and its difficult location and defense exposed it to military attacks by Moors and Christians.[27] The city of Guarda was founded in a place much easier to defend, which would allow it to be taken Idanha as the main post of Beira Interior.[28]

The first Cathedral of Guarda was built in that same year, on the initiative of Bishop D. Martinho and with the support of King Sancho I. However, a few years later, it would be transferred to another place inside the city gates, between the years 1208 and 1214. Between 1390 and 1396 the current Cathedral of Guarda was built, at the initiative of Bishop D. Frei Vasco after the support granted by the king John I. The cathedral was later expanded between 1397 and 1426, between 1435 and 1458, and between 1504 and 1517.[29]

King Denis and Queen Elizabeth were in the Guarda region after their marriage, held on February 11, 1281, at the Royal Palace of Barcelona. They were there between November 1281 and the end of July 1282, particularly in the town of Trancoso.[30] The king signed the "Customs of Guarda" which consisted of letters from King Denis regarding the appeals of the residents of the villages and farms under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the bishop, on the income of 1,100 pounds that the county leased to Afonso, count of Boulogne, and also on the conflict that existed between the inhabitants of Vela and the inhabitants of Guarda (1311, 1315, 1321). There King Denis also prepared war with Castile, which would be resolved through the Treaty of Alcañices. In 1282, King Denis held the first Cortes de Guarda.[28]

1383–1385 Portuguese interregnum and House of Aviz edit

 
Cruise (or pillory) of Guarda.

In 1371, Denis granted in Guarda a "land of refuge" for the "humanized", who were the people convicted of murder, whom the king pardoned certain crimes or misdemeanors, with the aim that they would settle in the lands near borders.[31] In 1383 a college for poor students was created in the city by Bishop Afonso Correia II, associated with the Episcopal school of Guarda, existing since (at least) the 13th century.[32]

In 1465 King Afonso V made new Courts in Guarda, where the judges of the Civil Chamber were forbidden to disembark facts related to the city of Lisbon and whose resolutions were exclusive powers of the king.[33][34] In 1475, Prince John (future King John II) led a Council in Guarda to gather the troops that would participate in the Battle of Toro, within the course of the War of the Castilian Succession.[35] In the 1490s, when the expulsion of the Jews from Spain happened, Guarda received new inhabitants for its Jewish community, who would bring a new life to commerce in this border area. In 1493, the born and resident of Guarda, Rui de Pina, planned the Treaty of Tordesillas and set out on a diplomatic mission to Castile.[36] In 1496 and 1497, during the reign of Manuel I, the conversion or expulsion of the Jews was ordered, which led to the appearance of the so-called New Christians (or Marranos), and as well as the expulsion of the moors, dand or place to the appearance of crypto-Judaism in the region.[37] On October 22, 1536, the Inquisition began, and the persecution against Hindus (in Portuguese India), Muslims and Jews was launched.[38] The persecutions were also launched in Guarda, particularly as of June 8, 1564, when authorization was given to D. Ambrosio Capelo, inquisitor of Guarda, to conduct the inquisition in the dioceses of Guarda and Lamego.[39]

Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 edit

 
Old building of the city hall of the city of Guarda from the 17th century.

In 1580, during the course of the dynastic crisis of 1580, the Bishop of Guarda, D. João, took sides for the independence of Portugal and opposed Philippine rule. The bishop then resisted the outcome of the Battle of Alcântara and continued to side with António, Prior of Crato, contrary to all the other Portuguese bishops.[40] On March 18, 1582, the Pope condemned the "excesses" committed by D. João, bishop of Guarda, and he died in 1592 under the rule of Philip II of Spain (Philip I of Portugal).[41][42]

Iberian Union edit

On September 21, 1597, the synod was held in which new statutes or constitutions of the bishopric of the city began, in order to accommodate the decrees of the Council of Trent, in the context of the Counter-Reformation of the Catholic Church.[43]

Braganza Dynasty edit

 
Interior of the Misericórdia Church.

In 1655 the exploitation of tin mines in Guarda was intensified.[44] In 1674, the diocesan synod of Guarda took place, in order to regulate tithes.[45] Between 1728 and 1730, the Guardense doctor Simão de Castro was convicted of the inquisition in the city, for accusations of Judaism. As a result, he took refuge in Portuguese India, where he settled from 1734.[46]

In 1762-1763 the Guarda region was invaded by Spanish forces, during the Seven Years' War, and several towns in the area were occupied by Spain, including Almeida. This town was returned to Portugal in 1763, after the peace treaty signed in Paris.[47] In 1801, the Marquis of Alorna built bunkers in Guarda, against bomb attacks, after the deterioration of diplomatic relations with Spain.[48] That same year, the first section of the walls was demolished, on the orders of Alorna Marqués, in order to reuse its stone in the construction of a fort in the neighboring town of Vale de Estrela, to the west of the city.[49] As a result of the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal, with troops commanded by the French general Loison, a revolt took place in Guarda on June 21, 1808, after the transfer of the Portuguese court to Brazil as a result of these invasions.[50] The March 22, 1811, the French general André Masséna decided to concentrate the French army around Guarda and Belmonte, far from the fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida. On April 3 of the same year, at the Battle of Sabugal, the British General Wellington won against General Jean Reynier, and forced Masséna to leave Portugal.[51] After the particularly severe devastations caused in the Diocese of Guarda and its neighboring Diocese of Pinhel (currently also in the district of Guarda), these two dioceses were, in Portugal, until August 1811, the third and fourth most benefited by donations to the victims of the third French invasion of Portugal led by Masséna, just behind Leiria and Lisbon.[52]

In 1829, during a cold snap, it was reported in Guarda that temperatures had dropped to low enough to freeze eggs, brandy, and other things that only freeze in severe cold.[53] In 1835, another section of the wall was destroyed, between the keep and Porta Nova (New Gate), and its stone was used in the construction of the new public cemetery.[49] In 1855 the Lyceum of Guarda was founded. In this institution, famous people related to literature and other intellectual areas in Portugal studied, including Vergílio Ferreira (writer awarded the Camões Prize), Eduardo Lourenço (essayist and philosopher) and Augusto Gil (neo-romantic poet)[54] In 1868, during the reign of Luis I, the publication of Guarda's O Egytaniense began, which was one of the first newspapers in Guarda and probably the first newspaper in the city.[55] The Humanitarian Association of Egitanian Volunteer Firefighters (which, today, is better known as "Guarda Volunteer Firefighters"), was founded in 1876 at the initiative of a group of Guardenses concerned about the lack of a fire department in the city.[56] In 1881, the Diocese of Pinhel (including, namely Almeida) was extinct and incorporated into the Diocese of Guarda.[57] In 1882 the Beira Alta railway line was inaugurated (with the presence of King Louis I and the royal family), which linked the coastal city of Figueira da Foz and Vilar Formoso, on the border with Spain, stopping at the Guarda railway station. It is currently the main railway connection between Portugal and the rest of Europe.[58][59] In 1893, a second railway line was completed with the terminal station in Guarda (the Beira Baixa line), connecting this city and Abrantes, in Ribatejo.[60] On January 1, 1899, electric lighting was introduced in Guarda, making it one of the first Portuguese cities to be electrified.[61] In 1897 the "Escola Normal" (Normal School) was founded in the city for the training of secondary school teachers.[62] In May 1907, with the presence of King Carlos and Queen Amélia, the Sousa Martins Sanatorium was inaugurated in the city, the first of its kind that has been introduced by the National Assistance to tuberculosis victims.[63][64]

First Portuguese Republic, Estado Novo, Third Portuguese Republic edit

 
Guardense poet Augusto Gil.

After the implementation of the republic in Portugal, in 1910, newspapers would appear throughout the District of Guarda, with a special concentration in Guarda and Seia, that for the most part would clearly assume republican ideals for propaganda purposes. These constituted a source of extreme importance for the reconstruction of the recent history of the various communities of the District during the implementation of the republican regime.[65]

The legendary Guardense poet Augusto Gil died on February 26, 1929, already at the time of the military dictatorship.[66] After the political and military upheavals and the economic crisis, largely caused by the decision on Portugal's participation in the First World War, the military coup of May 28, 1926,[67] occurred, which would lead to a 48-year dictatorship, military until the mid-1930s, and then civil, until 1974. Meanwhile, the only moment in which the dictatorship of Salazar (Franco's ally in Spain) was threatened, occurred in 1958 when General Humberto Delgado decided to run for the presidential elections, proposing the resignation of Salazar.[68][69] On the night of April 24, 1974, Captain Augusto José Monteiro Valente, of the Guarda Infantry Regiment, arrested its commander and joined the Armed Forces Movement (MFA) that the following day was going to overthrow the dictatorial regime of Salazar and Caetano in the Carnation Revolution, being described as one of the brightest and most committed Portuguese military in this revolution.[70]

In 1942 the first hotel was opened in the city of Guarda, the "Hotel Turismo" active to this day, and an iconic symbol of tourism in this city.[71] In 1963, the Industrias Lusitanas Renault (automobile factory) began to work in Guarda, which would be active until 1987, producing 189,461 vehicles of the models Renault 4, Renault 5, Renault 6, Renault 8, Renault 10, Renault 12 , Renault 16 and Renault Trafic. Then came "Delco Remy" and then "Delphi (Autopeças)", until the closure of this American multinational in December 2010.[72] In 1965 the Guarda Nursing School (now known as the Escola Superior de Saúde) was created, which later, in 2001, would be integrated into the Guarda Polytechnic Institute.[73] In 1980, the Guarda Polytechnic Institute was created, which began its academic activities in 1986 through the Higher School of Education and, the following year, the Higher School of Technology and Management. In 1999, the Higher School of Tourism and Telecommunications would also be created in this institute, in the neighboring city of Seia.[74]

Gastronomy edit

 
Traditional enchidos in the Guarda region.

The gastronomy of Guarda is associated with the gastronomy of the Serra da Estrela. Some of the most outstanding typical dishes are the following: roast lamb, rice with duck in the Guarda way, and Lagareiro cod, which can be easily found in regional cuisine restaurants. The gastronomy of the city includes a wide range of meat-based dishes, given the geographical location of the city, as well as the surrounding lands, which are conducive to grazing. There is also a wide variety of fish dishes from freshwater streams. Cod is the exception, since its conservation process (by drying) has always allowed its consumption in lands far from the sea. The pig occupies an important place in the local gastronomy, with countless dishes made with this type of meat. The ham cured in sea salt can be highlighted, as well as the typical local cured meats (black pudding, farinheira and chouriço), such as tripe with vegetables. Other common meats are lamb, goat, beef, and white meat. Carquesa (Genista tridentata) rice is also a very typical dish in the city and the region.

At the time of the hunting season, unique dishes, such as hare rice "malandrinho", or wild boar with beans are eaten.

In the fall, Trancoso's edible mushroom stew (champignons) and chestnut soup are popular (it can also be eaten cooked, boiled, or sweet).[75]

Heritage edit

 
Medieval street with the Church of São Vicente in the background.

A medieval temple built in Gothic and Manueline styles.[76] Its restoration, carried out by the architect Rosendo Carvalheira, took place between 1899 and 1921.[77]

The castle was declared a National Monument on June 16, 1910.[78] Its construction, supposedly on a Roman-Lusitanian fort from the 1st century, took place between the 12th and 14th centuries.[79]

  • Old Episcopal Palace of Guarda
  • Anta de Pêra do Moço
  • Tower of the blacksmiths (ferreiros)
  • Convent of São Francisco de Guarda or Convent of the Holy Spirit
  • Chapel of Our Lady of Mileu
  • Archaeological site of Póvoa do Mileu
  • Fountain of Dorna
  • Church of São Vicente
  • Church of Misericórdia
  • Cruise or pillory (pelourinho) from Guarda
  • Castro do Jarmelo (place built in pre-Roman) times
  • Paços do Concelho, (old town hall)
  • Castro de Tintinolho, an important place in the wars between Lusitanians and Romans
  • Solar na Rua do Encontro (house built in the 15th or 16th century, which at the end of the 17th century was enriched in its facade, with an innovative element that transformed the appearance of the room, which gave it a nobility status to the family that lived there.)
  • Casa das Chaves Bandarra (House of the Keys Bandarra), on Calle Sancho I
  • Fountain (Chafariz) of the Alameda de Santo André

Economy edit

The main economic sectors of Guarda are: tourism, textiles, electric wire and cable industry for automobile manufacturing and for energy industries, wood, glass, marble and granite processing, metallurgy, aluminum manufacturing, chemical products, blinds, cold cuts, bakery and pastry, dairy industry, as well as construction companies. There are also handicraft activities and agricultural and agro-livestock activities in the rural environment of the municipality.[80][81][82][83][84][85][86][87]

Recreational and sports clubs edit

The main football club in the city is Guarda Unida, which participates in the first district division in the 2014-2015 season.[88] Other clubs and associations of this type in the city include the Guarda Mountaineering Club, founded in 1981,[89] The Pinheiro Center for Sport, Culture and Social Solidarity, integrated into the Guarda Athletics Association,[90] the CSS - Associação de Desenvolvimento Carapito S. Salvador[91] and the Lameirinhas Sports and Recreation Group, dedicated to futsal.[92]

Parishes edit

The municipality consists of the following 43 parishes:[93]

  • Adão
  • Aldeia do Bispo
  • Aldeia Viçosa
  • Alvendre
  • Arrifana
  • Avelãs da Ribeira
  • Avelãs de Ambom e Rocamondo
  • Benespera
  • Casal de Cinza
  • Castanheira
  • Cavadoude
  • Codesseiro
  • Corujeira e Trinta
  • Faia
  • Famalicão
  • Fernão Joanes
  • Gonçalo
  • Gonçalo Bocas
  • Guarda
  • Jarmelo São Miguel
  • Jarmelo São Pedro
  • João Antão
  • Maçainhas
  • Marmeleiro
  • Meios
  • Mizarela, Pêro Soares e Vila Soeiro
  • Panóias de Cima
  • Pega
  • Pêra do Moço
  • Porto da Carne
  • Pousade e Albardo
  • Ramela
  • Rochoso e Monte Margarida
  • Santana da Azinha
  • Sobral da Serra
  • Vale de Estrela
  • Valhelhas
  • Vela
  • Videmonte
  • Vila Cortês do Mondego
  • Vila Fernando
  • Vila Franca do Deão
  • Vila Garcia

International relations edit

Guarda is twinned with:[94]

Notable people edit

 
Evelina Coelho, 2013

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • Amílcar Guerra, Carlos Fabião (1992). "Viriato: Genealogia de um Mito" (PDF). Penélope: Revista de história e ciências sociais (in Portuguese) (8): 9–24. ISSN 0871-7486.
  • Cardoso Rosas, Lúcia Maria (1996). "O restauro da Sé da Guarda. Rosendo Carvalheira e o poder sugestivo da arquitectura" (PDF). Revista da Faculdade de Letras. Historia (in Portuguese) (13): 535–560. ISSN 0871-164X.
  • de la Torre Rodriguez, José Ignacio (1998). "La sociedad de frontera de Ribacôa: Fueros y modelos de poblamiento" (PDF). Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto (15): 783–800. ISSN 0871-164X.
  • Fonseca Moretón, Emilio (2004). "Viviendas de judíos y conversos en Galicia y el Norte de Portugal" (PDF). Anuario Brigantino (27).
  • López Melero, Raquel (1988). "Viriatus Hispanieae Romulus" (PDF). Espacio, tiempo y forma. Serie II, Historia antigua (1): 247–262. ISSN 1130-1082.
  • Martín López, David (2012). (PDF). Revista de Patrimonio Histórico. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 June 2013. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  • Pastor Muñoz, Mauricio (2009). "Viriato en el ámbito ursonense" (PDF). Cuadernos de los Amigos de los Museos de Osuna (11): 40–51. ISSN 1697-1019.
  • Pérez Vilatela, Luciano (2000). Lusitania: historia y etnología. Real Academia de la Historia. ISBN 9788489512689.
  • Sánchez Moreno, Eduardo (2002). "Algunas notas sobre la guerra como estrategia de interacción social en la Hispania prerromana: Viriato, jefe redistributivo(y II)" (PDF). Habis (33): 141–174. ISSN 0210-7694.

External links edit

  • Municipality official website
  • Photos from Guarda

guarda, portugal, guarda, portuguese, pronunciation, ˈɡwaɾðɐ, city, municipality, district, guarda, capital, beiras, serra, estrela, region, central, portugal, population, 2021, area, square, kilometres, with, inhabitants, city, proper, 2006, founded, king, sa. Guarda Portuguese pronunciation ˈɡwaɾdɐ is a city and a municipality in the District of Guarda and the capital of the Beiras e Serra da Estrela sub region in central Portugal The population in 2021 was 40 126 1 in an area of 712 10 square kilometres 274 94 sq mi 2 with 31 224 inhabitants in the city proper in 2006 3 Founded by King Sancho I in 1199 4 Guarda is the city located at the highest altitude in Portugal 1 056 m 3 465 ft a s l 5 and one of the most important cities in the Portuguese region of Beira Alta Serra da Estrela the highest mountain range in continental Portugal is partially located in the district The city is served by national and international trains on the Beira Alta and Baixa railway lines The present mayor is Sergio Costa as an independent The municipal holiday is November 27 GuardaMunicipalityView of Guarda Cathedral City hall Church and Mercy Building Statue of King Sancho I Old archFlagCoat of armsCoordinates 40 32 N 7 20 W 40 533 N 7 333 W 40 533 7 333Country PortugalRegionCentroIntermunic comm Beiras e Serra da EstrelaDistrictGuardaParishes43Government PresidentSergio CostaArea Total712 10 km2 274 94 sq mi Elevation1 056 m 3 465 ft Population 2021 Total40 126 Density56 km2 150 sq mi Time zoneUTC 00 00 WET Summer DST UTC 01 00 WEST Local holidayNovember 27Websitehttp www mun guarda ptGuarda is known as the city of the five F s Farta Forte Fria Fiel e Formosa abundant or totally satisfied strong cold loyal and beautiful 6 The explanation of the five F s is as follows Farta abundant due to the fertility of the lands of the Mondego River valley Forte strong because the castle tower the walls and its geographical location demonstrate its strength Fria cold due to its proximity to Serra da Estrela Fiel loyal because the Captain General of the Castle Guard Alvaro Gil Cabral Pedro Alvares Cabral s great great grandfather refused to hand over the keys to the city to the King of Castile during the Crisis of 1383 1385 and still had the strength to participate in the Battle of Aljubarrota Formosa beautiful for the natural beauty of the urban nucleus 7 8 Contents 1 Geography 2 Climate 3 Toponym 4 History 4 1 Prehistory 4 2 From the Neolithic to the Christian Reconquest 4 3 Burgundy dynasty 4 4 1383 1385 Portuguese interregnum and House of Aviz 4 5 Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 4 6 Iberian Union 4 7 Braganza Dynasty 4 8 First Portuguese Republic Estado Novo Third Portuguese Republic 5 Gastronomy 6 Heritage 7 Economy 8 Recreational and sports clubs 9 Parishes 10 International relations 11 Notable people 12 References 12 1 Works cited 13 External linksGeography editGuarda is the largest city in its district capital of the Guarda District and the Beira Interior Norte Subregion within the Centro Region The municipality is bordered by Pinhel to the north to the east by Almeida to the southeast by Sabugal to the south by Belmonte and Covilha to the west by Manteigas and Gouveia and to the northwest by Celorico da Beira Guarda is the highest city in continental Portugal altitude 1 056 m located to the northeast of Serra da Estrela the largest mountain in mainland Portugal The main attraction in Guarda is its cathedral known as the Se da Guarda Guarda is a diocese of the same name Guarda railway station is served by the railway line Linha da Beira Alta with international services towards Salamanca and Madrid and domestic services to Pinhel Vila Franca das Naves Trancoso Celorico da Beira Gouveia Nelas Carregal do Sal Santa Comba Dao Mortagua Luso Bucaco and Pampilhosa The station at Guarda has 2013 eighteen daily arrivals and departures of passenger trains and there is a small freight terminal The section of the Linha da Beira Baixa which runs from Guarda through Belmonte Sabugal Covilha Fundao Castelo Branco and Abrantes to Entroncamento is operating again having been closed in 2010 between Guarda and Covilha The main motorways are A25 Aveiro Viseu Guarda Vilar Formoso and A23 Guarda Covilha Fundao Castelo Branco Abrantes Torres Novas Numerous motorcoach long distance bus services use these motorways to link Guarda with Porto Lisbon and other Portuguese cities Guarda is the antipode to Puponga in New Zealand Climate editGuarda has a cool Mediterranean climate 9 Koppen Csb with some oceanic influences It has lower average temperatures than most climates of this subtype in part due to its high altitude Winters are cool and wet and summers are warm and dry Out of all district capitals of Portugal it is the one that experiences the most snowfall on average averaging about 12 days per year 10 Climate data for Guarda Portugal 1981 2010 normals altitude 1 019 m 3 343 ft Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 15 2 59 4 17 6 63 7 23 0 73 4 24 5 76 1 30 8 87 4 33 7 92 7 38 3 100 9 34 6 94 3 36 0 96 8 27 0 80 6 21 3 70 3 15 8 60 4 38 3 100 9 Average high C F 6 8 44 2 8 6 47 5 11 4 52 5 12 4 54 3 16 4 61 5 21 2 70 2 25 1 77 2 25 0 77 0 21 1 70 0 15 0 59 0 10 0 50 0 7 8 46 0 15 0 59 0 Daily mean C F 4 0 39 2 5 4 41 7 7 6 45 7 8 5 47 3 12 0 53 6 16 3 61 3 19 5 67 1 19 5 67 1 16 5 61 7 11 6 52 9 7 5 45 5 5 4 41 7 11 1 52 1 Average low C F 1 2 34 2 2 3 36 1 3 7 38 7 4 6 40 3 7 7 45 9 11 3 52 3 14 0 57 2 13 9 57 0 11 9 53 4 8 3 46 9 5 0 41 0 2 9 37 2 7 2 45 0 Record low C F 10 8 12 6 6 2 20 8 8 0 17 6 3 8 25 2 1 8 28 8 1 2 34 2 4 4 39 9 6 0 42 8 3 5 38 3 0 6 30 9 7 5 18 5 6 7 19 9 10 8 12 6 Average precipitation mm inches 104 8 4 13 71 2 2 80 59 4 2 34 86 7 3 41 86 3 3 40 33 9 1 33 18 2 0 72 10 4 0 41 58 2 2 29 107 4 4 23 127 1 5 00 150 6 5 93 914 2 35 99 Source Instituto de Meteorologia 11 Toponym edit nbsp Se Cathedral and the statue of Dom Sancho I For a long time historians believed that the civitas Igaeditanorum Egitania was located in Guarda but more recently it has been established that this location was in Idanha a Velha in Beira Baixa It was from here that the gentile egitanian in relation to the natives of the city took root Bordering the lands of the igaeditani north of Guarda were the lands of the Lancians Oppidani whose capital the civitas Lancia Oppidana was referred to as being located a short distance from the current location of Guarda This theory was fiercely defended by General Joao de Almeida influential Portuguese military man hero of the African campaigns native of Guarda which has led some critics to disparage it However all the following investigations indicate its veracity The place name Guarda may have been a derivation of a fortress overlooking the Mondego River the Castro Tintinolho whose place was called Ward by the Visigoths 12 13 History edit nbsp Porta do Sol Prehistory edit There is evidence of a meteorite impact in the region northeast of Guarda with about 35 km in diameter Some pre Ordovician evidence from the Cambrian period the earliest Phanerozoic epoch is present 14 From the Neolithic to the Christian Reconquest edit nbsp Main tower of the Castle of GuardaIn the first centuries of the Romanization of the Iberian Peninsula Lusitanian tribes lived in the Guarda region These tribes included namely the Igaeditani the Lancienses Oppidani and the Transcudani These peoples united under a true federation resisted Romanization for two centuries Unlike the Latinized towns these towns did not consume wine but instead acorn beer His weapon of choice was the falcata a curved sword which easily broke Roman swords due to its metallurgical superiority Their pagan gods also differed from the Romans Some Lusitanian religious inscriptions can still be found in some sanctuaries such as Cabeco de Fraguas 8 It is argued that the ancestral town of Castelos Velhos from the Iron Age was located in the current city of Guarda 15 Although there are doubts about the place of birth the Lusitanian warrior Viriathus hero of Portuguese history to the present day could have been born in the Guarda region in the Herminios Mountains corresponding to the current Serra da Estrela Other historians suggest that he may have been born closer to the Portuguese coast 16 17 16 18 His death by murder by traitors paid by Caepio Roman consul and military man who participated in the Lusitanian War occurred in Cabeco de Fraguas in the current municipality of Guarda in 139 or 138 BC 19 20 21 22 19 After Roman times the period of occupation by the Visigoths followed Later the region was occupied by the Islamic civilization and by the Kingdom of Asturias Only after the process of the Christian reconquest was its jurisdiction granted which definitely confirmed the importance of the city and the region 23 Burgundy dynasty edit In 1199 Sancho I of Portugal transferred the diocese of Egitania modern day Idanha a Velha to Guarda 24 while granting the city a charter that was based on the short charter of Salamanca 25 Situated high up the city had a remarkable defensive and strategic importance 5 The Jewish quarter of the city which already had some importance back in the 13th century among the communities of the kingdom of Portugal was between 600 and 850 people in the 15th century and hosted a significant number Jews expelled from Spain in 1492 5 In 1202 the diocese of Guarda was created transferred from Idanha the ancient and important Egitanian Roman city 26 which was largely abandoned during the time of the invasions and wars against the Moors Muslims since according to the legends its situation on the border and its difficult location and defense exposed it to military attacks by Moors and Christians 27 The city of Guarda was founded in a place much easier to defend which would allow it to be taken Idanha as the main post of Beira Interior 28 The first Cathedral of Guarda was built in that same year on the initiative of Bishop D Martinho and with the support of King Sancho I However a few years later it would be transferred to another place inside the city gates between the years 1208 and 1214 Between 1390 and 1396 the current Cathedral of Guarda was built at the initiative of Bishop D Frei Vasco after the support granted by the king John I The cathedral was later expanded between 1397 and 1426 between 1435 and 1458 and between 1504 and 1517 29 King Denis and Queen Elizabeth were in the Guarda region after their marriage held on February 11 1281 at the Royal Palace of Barcelona They were there between November 1281 and the end of July 1282 particularly in the town of Trancoso 30 The king signed the Customs of Guarda which consisted of letters from King Denis regarding the appeals of the residents of the villages and farms under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the bishop on the income of 1 100 pounds that the county leased to Afonso count of Boulogne and also on the conflict that existed between the inhabitants of Vela and the inhabitants of Guarda 1311 1315 1321 There King Denis also prepared war with Castile which would be resolved through the Treaty of Alcanices In 1282 King Denis held the first Cortes de Guarda 28 1383 1385 Portuguese interregnum and House of Aviz edit nbsp Cruise or pillory of Guarda In 1371 Denis granted in Guarda a land of refuge for the humanized who were the people convicted of murder whom the king pardoned certain crimes or misdemeanors with the aim that they would settle in the lands near borders 31 In 1383 a college for poor students was created in the city by Bishop Afonso Correia II associated with the Episcopal school of Guarda existing since at least the 13th century 32 In 1465 King Afonso V made new Courts in Guarda where the judges of the Civil Chamber were forbidden to disembark facts related to the city of Lisbon and whose resolutions were exclusive powers of the king 33 34 In 1475 Prince John future King John II led a Council in Guarda to gather the troops that would participate in the Battle of Toro within the course of the War of the Castilian Succession 35 In the 1490s when the expulsion of the Jews from Spain happened Guarda received new inhabitants for its Jewish community who would bring a new life to commerce in this border area In 1493 the born and resident of Guarda Rui de Pina planned the Treaty of Tordesillas and set out on a diplomatic mission to Castile 36 In 1496 and 1497 during the reign of Manuel I the conversion or expulsion of the Jews was ordered which led to the appearance of the so called New Christians or Marranos and as well as the expulsion of the moors dand or place to the appearance of crypto Judaism in the region 37 On October 22 1536 the Inquisition began and the persecution against Hindus in Portuguese India Muslims and Jews was launched 38 The persecutions were also launched in Guarda particularly as of June 8 1564 when authorization was given to D Ambrosio Capelo inquisitor of Guarda to conduct the inquisition in the dioceses of Guarda and Lamego 39 Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 edit nbsp Old building of the city hall of the city of Guarda from the 17th century In 1580 during the course of the dynastic crisis of 1580 the Bishop of Guarda D Joao took sides for the independence of Portugal and opposed Philippine rule The bishop then resisted the outcome of the Battle of Alcantara and continued to side with Antonio Prior of Crato contrary to all the other Portuguese bishops 40 On March 18 1582 the Pope condemned the excesses committed by D Joao bishop of Guarda and he died in 1592 under the rule of Philip II of Spain Philip I of Portugal 41 42 Iberian Union edit On September 21 1597 the synod was held in which new statutes or constitutions of the bishopric of the city began in order to accommodate the decrees of the Council of Trent in the context of the Counter Reformation of the Catholic Church 43 Braganza Dynasty edit nbsp Interior of the Misericordia Church In 1655 the exploitation of tin mines in Guarda was intensified 44 In 1674 the diocesan synod of Guarda took place in order to regulate tithes 45 Between 1728 and 1730 the Guardense doctor Simao de Castro was convicted of the inquisition in the city for accusations of Judaism As a result he took refuge in Portuguese India where he settled from 1734 46 In 1762 1763 the Guarda region was invaded by Spanish forces during the Seven Years War and several towns in the area were occupied by Spain including Almeida This town was returned to Portugal in 1763 after the peace treaty signed in Paris 47 In 1801 the Marquis of Alorna built bunkers in Guarda against bomb attacks after the deterioration of diplomatic relations with Spain 48 That same year the first section of the walls was demolished on the orders of Alorna Marques in order to reuse its stone in the construction of a fort in the neighboring town of Vale de Estrela to the west of the city 49 As a result of the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal with troops commanded by the French general Loison a revolt took place in Guarda on June 21 1808 after the transfer of the Portuguese court to Brazil as a result of these invasions 50 The March 22 1811 the French general Andre Massena decided to concentrate the French army around Guarda and Belmonte far from the fortresses of Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida On April 3 of the same year at the Battle of Sabugal the British General Wellington won against General Jean Reynier and forced Massena to leave Portugal 51 After the particularly severe devastations caused in the Diocese of Guarda and its neighboring Diocese of Pinhel currently also in the district of Guarda these two dioceses were in Portugal until August 1811 the third and fourth most benefited by donations to the victims of the third French invasion of Portugal led by Massena just behind Leiria and Lisbon 52 In 1829 during a cold snap it was reported in Guarda that temperatures had dropped to low enough to freeze eggs brandy and other things that only freeze in severe cold 53 In 1835 another section of the wall was destroyed between the keep and Porta Nova New Gate and its stone was used in the construction of the new public cemetery 49 In 1855 the Lyceum of Guarda was founded In this institution famous people related to literature and other intellectual areas in Portugal studied including Vergilio Ferreira writer awarded the Camoes Prize Eduardo Lourenco essayist and philosopher and Augusto Gil neo romantic poet 54 In 1868 during the reign of Luis I the publication of Guarda s O Egytaniense began which was one of the first newspapers in Guarda and probably the first newspaper in the city 55 The Humanitarian Association of Egitanian Volunteer Firefighters which today is better known as Guarda Volunteer Firefighters was founded in 1876 at the initiative of a group of Guardenses concerned about the lack of a fire department in the city 56 In 1881 the Diocese of Pinhel including namely Almeida was extinct and incorporated into the Diocese of Guarda 57 In 1882 the Beira Alta railway line was inaugurated with the presence of King Louis I and the royal family which linked the coastal city of Figueira da Foz and Vilar Formoso on the border with Spain stopping at the Guarda railway station It is currently the main railway connection between Portugal and the rest of Europe 58 59 In 1893 a second railway line was completed with the terminal station in Guarda the Beira Baixa line connecting this city and Abrantes in Ribatejo 60 On January 1 1899 electric lighting was introduced in Guarda making it one of the first Portuguese cities to be electrified 61 In 1897 the Escola Normal Normal School was founded in the city for the training of secondary school teachers 62 In May 1907 with the presence of King Carlos and Queen Amelia the Sousa Martins Sanatorium was inaugurated in the city the first of its kind that has been introduced by the National Assistance to tuberculosis victims 63 64 First Portuguese Republic Estado Novo Third Portuguese Republic edit nbsp Guardense poet Augusto Gil After the implementation of the republic in Portugal in 1910 newspapers would appear throughout the District of Guarda with a special concentration in Guarda and Seia that for the most part would clearly assume republican ideals for propaganda purposes These constituted a source of extreme importance for the reconstruction of the recent history of the various communities of the District during the implementation of the republican regime 65 The legendary Guardense poet Augusto Gil died on February 26 1929 already at the time of the military dictatorship 66 After the political and military upheavals and the economic crisis largely caused by the decision on Portugal s participation in the First World War the military coup of May 28 1926 67 occurred which would lead to a 48 year dictatorship military until the mid 1930s and then civil until 1974 Meanwhile the only moment in which the dictatorship of Salazar Franco s ally in Spain was threatened occurred in 1958 when General Humberto Delgado decided to run for the presidential elections proposing the resignation of Salazar 68 69 On the night of April 24 1974 Captain Augusto Jose Monteiro Valente of the Guarda Infantry Regiment arrested its commander and joined the Armed Forces Movement MFA that the following day was going to overthrow the dictatorial regime of Salazar and Caetano in the Carnation Revolution being described as one of the brightest and most committed Portuguese military in this revolution 70 In 1942 the first hotel was opened in the city of Guarda the Hotel Turismo active to this day and an iconic symbol of tourism in this city 71 In 1963 the Industrias Lusitanas Renault automobile factory began to work in Guarda which would be active until 1987 producing 189 461 vehicles of the models Renault 4 Renault 5 Renault 6 Renault 8 Renault 10 Renault 12 Renault 16 and Renault Trafic Then came Delco Remy and then Delphi Autopecas until the closure of this American multinational in December 2010 72 In 1965 the Guarda Nursing School now known as the Escola Superior de Saude was created which later in 2001 would be integrated into the Guarda Polytechnic Institute 73 In 1980 the Guarda Polytechnic Institute was created which began its academic activities in 1986 through the Higher School of Education and the following year the Higher School of Technology and Management In 1999 the Higher School of Tourism and Telecommunications would also be created in this institute in the neighboring city of Seia 74 Gastronomy edit nbsp Traditional enchidos in the Guarda region The gastronomy of Guarda is associated with the gastronomy of the Serra da Estrela Some of the most outstanding typical dishes are the following roast lamb rice with duck in the Guarda way and Lagareiro cod which can be easily found in regional cuisine restaurants The gastronomy of the city includes a wide range of meat based dishes given the geographical location of the city as well as the surrounding lands which are conducive to grazing There is also a wide variety of fish dishes from freshwater streams Cod is the exception since its conservation process by drying has always allowed its consumption in lands far from the sea The pig occupies an important place in the local gastronomy with countless dishes made with this type of meat The ham cured in sea salt can be highlighted as well as the typical local cured meats black pudding farinheira and chourico such as tripe with vegetables Other common meats are lamb goat beef and white meat Carquesa Genista tridentata rice is also a very typical dish in the city and the region At the time of the hunting season unique dishes such as hare rice malandrinho or wild boar with beans are eaten In the fall Trancoso s edible mushroom stew champignons and chestnut soup are popular it can also be eaten cooked boiled or sweet 75 Heritage edit nbsp Medieval street with the Church of Sao Vicente in the background Guarda CathedralA medieval temple built in Gothic and Manueline styles 76 Its restoration carried out by the architect Rosendo Carvalheira took place between 1899 and 1921 77 Castle of GuardaThe castle was declared a National Monument on June 16 1910 78 Its construction supposedly on a Roman Lusitanian fort from the 1st century took place between the 12th and 14th centuries 79 Old Episcopal Palace of Guarda Anta de Pera do Moco Tower of the blacksmiths ferreiros Convent of Sao Francisco de Guarda or Convent of the Holy Spirit Chapel of Our Lady of Mileu Archaeological site of Povoa do Mileu Fountain of Dorna Church of Sao Vicente Church of Misericordia Cruise or pillory pelourinho from Guarda Castro do Jarmelo place built in pre Roman times Pacos do Concelho old town hall Castro de Tintinolho an important place in the wars between Lusitanians and Romans Solar na Rua do Encontro house built in the 15th or 16th century which at the end of the 17th century was enriched in its facade with an innovative element that transformed the appearance of the room which gave it a nobility status to the family that lived there Casa das Chaves Bandarra House of the Keys Bandarra on Calle Sancho I Fountain Chafariz of the Alameda de Santo AndreEconomy editThe main economic sectors of Guarda are tourism textiles electric wire and cable industry for automobile manufacturing and for energy industries wood glass marble and granite processing metallurgy aluminum manufacturing chemical products blinds cold cuts bakery and pastry dairy industry as well as construction companies There are also handicraft activities and agricultural and agro livestock activities in the rural environment of the municipality 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 Recreational and sports clubs editThe main football club in the city is Guarda Unida which participates in the first district division in the 2014 2015 season 88 Other clubs and associations of this type in the city include the Guarda Mountaineering Club founded in 1981 89 The Pinheiro Center for Sport Culture and Social Solidarity integrated into the Guarda Athletics Association 90 the CSS Associacao de Desenvolvimento Carapito S Salvador 91 and the Lameirinhas Sports and Recreation Group dedicated to futsal 92 Parishes editThe municipality consists of the following 43 parishes 93 Adao Aldeia do Bispo Aldeia Vicosa Alvendre Arrifana Avelas da Ribeira Avelas de Ambom e Rocamondo Benespera Casal de Cinza Castanheira Cavadoude Codesseiro Corujeira e Trinta Faia Famalicao Fernao Joanes Goncalo Goncalo Bocas Guarda Jarmelo Sao Miguel Jarmelo Sao Pedro Joao Antao Macainhas Marmeleiro Meios Mizarela Pero Soares e Vila Soeiro Panoias de Cima Pega Pera do Moco Porto da Carne Pousade e Albardo Ramela Rochoso e Monte Margarida Santana da Azinha Sobral da Serra Vale de Estrela Valhelhas Vela Videmonte Vila Cortes do Mondego Vila Fernando Vila Franca do Deao Vila GarciaInternational relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Portugal Guarda is twinned with 94 nbsp Bejar Spain since 1979 94 nbsp Safad Israel since 1982 94 nbsp Waterbury United States since 1984 94 nbsp Siegburg Germany since 1985 94 nbsp Wattrelos France since 1990 94 Notable people edit nbsp Evelina Coelho 2013Rui de Pina 1440 1522 a Portuguese chronicler 95 Francisco Cabral 1529 1609 a Portuguese Jesuit priest and missionary in Japan Francisco de Pina 1585 1625 a Portuguese Jesuit priest and missionary in Vietnam Jose de Castro 1868 1929 lawyer journalist and 63rd Prime Minister of Portugal in 1915 Augusto Gil 1873 1929 in Guarda a lawyer and poet combining Symbolist verse with satire and simple lyricism Alvaro de Castro 1878 1928 78th and 88th Prime Minister of Portugal in 1920 amp 1923 4 Fausto Lopo de Carvalho 1890 1970 a pulmonologist specialising in phthisiology Jose Saraiva Martins born 1932 in Gagos de Jarmelo a Portuguese Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and the Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints Lili Canecas born 1944 a Portuguese socialite 96 Evelina Coelho 1945 2013 a Portuguese painter from Vila Fernando Carmen Yazalde born 1950 a Portuguese Argentine model and actress 97 Jose Urbano born 1966 a retired three time Olympian race walker Ines Monteiro born 1980 a middle and long distance track running athlete Pedro Carvalho born 1985 a Portuguese actor 98 References edit INE Plataforma de divulgacao dos Censos 2021 Resultados Provisorios Areas das freguesias concelhos distritos e pais Archived from the original on 2018 11 05 Retrieved 2018 11 05 Guarda in Portuguese Portal nacional Retrieved 26 December 2020 Evans David 2004 Portugal New Holland Publishers pp 195 ISBN 9781860111266 a b c Fonseca Moreton 2004 p 442 Cidade da Guarda Ciudad de Guarda Escola Superior de Tecnologia e Gestao Instituto Politecnico da Guarda Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Dias Valente Joaquim Carlos Guarda A cidade dos 5 F s PDF Camara Municipal da Guarda Ayuntamiento de Guarda Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b PT Circuito Centro e Interior historico Portugal Guarda Turiventos Turismo e Eventos Retrieved 25 December 2020 Guarda Portugal Climate Summary Weatherbase Retrieved 22 March 2015 https www ipma pt bin file data climate normal cn 71 00 GUARDA pdf bare URL PDF 1981 2010 Climate Normals Guarda IPMA Retrieved 22 March 2015 Guarda a cidade mais alta de Portugal Guarda IPG coordenadasgpsipg WordPress com Retrieved 26 December 2020 Povoado fortificado do Tintinolho SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Retrieved 26 December 2020 Monteiro J F 1991 The Guarda Circular Structure A Possible Complex Impact Crater Lunar and Planetary Science Conference SAO NASA Astrophysics Data System ADS 22 915 Bibcode 1991LPI 22 915M Retrieved 25 December 2020 Alarcao Jorge Notas de arqueologia epigrafia e toponimia IV PDF Revista Portuguesa de Arqueologia Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b Perez Vilatela 2000 p 261 Amilcar Guerra 1992 p 14 Amilcar Guerra 1992 p 15 16 a b Sanchez Moreno 2002 p 152 Pastor Munoz 2009 p 48 Lopez Melero 1988 p 260 261 Pastor Munoz 2009 p 41 48 Viagens na Nossa Terra Guarda Colegio Internato dos Carvalhos Archived from the original on 2015 04 15 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Meyer Hermann Reinhard About the genealogical relationship between medieval municipal law of Coria and Castelo Bom PDF Bielefeld University Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 25 December 2020 de la Torre Rodriguez 1998 p 789 Diocese da Guarda Casa Santa Marta Irmazinhas dos Anciaos Desamparados Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 25 December 2020 A Lenda da Gardunha Centro de Estudos Ataide Oliveira Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b Historias e sabores Guarda Historias e sabores Retrieved 25 December 2020 Catedral da Guarda Se da Guarda SIPA Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Retrieved 25 December 2020 Pero Sanz Jose Miguel 19 September 2011 Santa Isabel in Spanish 2011 ed Palabra p 41 ISBN 978 84 9840 546 0 Maldonado de Vasconcelos Correia Luis Miguel 2010 Castelos em Portugal Castelos em Portugal retrato do seu perfil arquitectonico 1509 1949 Mediabooks ISBN 9789892600222 Retrieved 25 December 2020 A Escola Episcopal da Se da Guarda PDF Revista do Instituto Politecnico da Guarda pp 195 199 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Cruz Coelho Maria Helena A Guarda em Cortes nos seculos XIV e XV PDF Revista Portuguesa de Historia Universidade de Coimbra Retrieved 25 December 2020 Documentos de D Afonso V Infante D Pedro e Principe D Joao PDF Arquivo Municipal de Lisboa Retrieved 25 December 2020 Ferreira Amadeu Mimoria Scrita de Sendin Mimoria Scrita de Sendin Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Tratado de Tordesillas O Tratado de Tordesilhas e as suas consequencias Educa ja Archived from the original on 7 June 2012 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Marcocci Giuseppe A Fundacao da Inquisicao em Portugal Um novo olhar PDF Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa Italia Retrieved 25 December 2020 Antonio Jose Saraiva 2001 Herman Prins Salomon Isaac S D Sassoon eds The Portuguese Inquisition and Its New Christians 1536 1765 Brill 2001 pp 345 347 Paiva Jose Pedro Os bispos e a inquisicao portuguesa 1536 1613 PDF Repositorio Institucional da Universidade Catolica Portuguesa Archived from the original PDF on 28 February 2013 Retrieved 25 December 2020 Paiva Jose Pedro Bishops and Politics The Portuguese Episcopacy During the Dynastic Crisis of 1580 University of Coimbra Centre for History Society and Culture Retrieved 25 December 2020 Joao de Portugal bispo da Guarda Geni com Retrieved 25 December 2020 Paiva Jose Pedro Restauracao da Independencia de Portugal Os dificeis tempos da Igreja antes e apos 1640 Secretariado Nacional da Pastoral da Cultura Retrieved 25 December 2020 Grande enciclopedia portuguesa e brasileira in Brazilian Portuguese Editorial Enciclopedia limitada 1936 p 897 Thomaz Manoel Fernandes 1819 Repertorio Geral ou Indice Alphabetico das Leis Extravagantes do Reino de Portugal in Brazilian Portuguese Real Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra p 260 Dissertacoes sobre os Dizimos Ecclesiasticos PDF Faculdade de Direito Universidade Nova de Lisboa ed p 27 Un Medico entre la Garras de la Inquisicion El proceso de Simon de Castro 1728 1730 PDF University of Southampton pp 373 388 Campanha de 1762 Guerra Fantastica 1762 1763 Arquivo Historico Militar Retrieved 26 December 2020 D Pedro de Almeida Portugal 3 º marques de Alorna Portugal Dicionario Historico Corografico Heraldico Biografico Bibliografico Numismatico e Artistico Retrieved 26 December 2020 a b Costa Pita Vanessa Maria A evolucao da paisagem urbana da cidade da Guarda ativacao desativacao do patrimonio edificado PDF Porto University permanent dead link Carrico Hugo Miguel 9 March 2013 Invasoes Napoleonicas Historia de Portugal Retrieved 26 December 2020 Cronologia das invasoes francesas 1811 O Portal da Historia As invasoes francesas Retrieved 26 December 2020 Sofrimentos das populacoes na terceira invasao francesa De Gouveia a Pombal PDF Faculdade de Letras e Centro de Historia da Sociedade e da Cultura da Universidade de Coimbra Retrieved 26 December 2020 Guarda Uma cidade talhada no granito Cafe Portugal Archived from the original on April 25 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Bras Gustavo 18 June 2005 Liceu Nacional da Guarda celebrou ontem 150 anos Publico Retrieved 26 December 2020 Rafael Gina Guedes 1998 2002 Jornais e Revistas Portugueses do sec XIX Lisboa Ministerio da Cultura Biblioteca Nacional p 286 ISBN 972 565 229 0 Historia Associacao Humanitaria dos Bombeiros Voluntarios Egitanienses Retrieved 26 December 2020 Historia de Almeida Municipio de Almeida Archived from the original on 2013 07 26 Retrieved 26 December 2020 130 Anos da Linha da Beira Alta Rota da Bairrada Archived from the original on 22 September 2021 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Gazeta dos Caminhos de Ferro PDF Sociedade SKF Limitada Retrieved 26 December 2020 Linha da Beira Baixa PDF Gazeta dos Caminhos de Ferro Retrieved 26 December 2020 De S Pedro Dos Comedeiros a Aldeia dos Trinta O Interior Retrieved 26 December 2020 permanent dead 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turismo em 2050 O Interior Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Foi um orgulho ter servido a fabrica que era a menina dos nossos olhos O Interior Archived from the original on 2015 05 05 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Escola Apresentacao Escuela Presentacion IPG Escola Superior de Saude Archived from the original on 5 May 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Historia do Instituto IPG Retrieved 26 December 2020 Gastronomia da Guarda Costasur Retrieved 26 December 2020 Martin Lopez 2012 p 9 Cardoso Rosas 1996 p 535 Decreto nº 38 147 PDF Diario do Governo nº 4 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Castelo da Guarda Sistema de Informacao para o Patrimonio Arquitectonico Retrieved 26 December 2020 Obervatorio Local Indicadores Socio Economicos das Freguesias do concelho da Guarda Admestrela Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Declaracao Ambiental 2013 PDF Coficab Retrieved 26 December 2020 permanent dead link Obervatorio Local Indicadores Socio Economicos das Freguesias do concelho da Guarda Admestrela Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Guarda Portugal Sodecia Archived from the original on 2015 03 07 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Vidreiros Reunidos foi fundada em 1991 Metalguarda Metalguarda Industria Metalurgica Retrieved 26 December 2020 Historial Egiquimica Archived from the original on 5 October 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Fumeiros da Guarda Europages Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Guarda Unida Desportiva vs Aguiar da Beira Mais um jogo do Campeonato Distrital da 1ª Divisao Guarda Unida Archived from the original on 2015 05 05 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Historia Clube de Montanhismo da Guarda Retrieved 26 December 2020 Clubes Filiados na AAG Retrieved 26 December 2020 Associativismo Desportivo Cultural Freguesia da Guarda Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 26 December 2020 Grupo Desportivo e Recreativo das Lameirinhas zerozero pt Retrieved 26 December 2020 Diario da Republica Law nr 11 A 2013 pages 552 55 56 PDF in Portuguese Retrieved 9 July 2014 a b c d e f Geminacoes de Cidades e Vilas Associacao Nacional de Municipios Portugueses Retrieved 26 December 2020 Pina Ruy de Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed 1911 pp 615 616 Lili Canecas IMDb Database retrieved 05 August 2021 Carmen Yazalde IMDb Database retrieved 05 August 2021 Pedro Carvalho IMDb Database retrieved 05 August 2021 Works cited edit Amilcar Guerra Carlos Fabiao 1992 Viriato Genealogia de um Mito PDF Penelope Revista de historia e ciencias sociais in Portuguese 8 9 24 ISSN 0871 7486 Cardoso Rosas Lucia Maria 1996 O restauro da Se da Guarda Rosendo Carvalheira e o poder sugestivo da arquitectura PDF Revista da Faculdade de Letras Historia in Portuguese 13 535 560 ISSN 0871 164X de la Torre Rodriguez Jose Ignacio 1998 La sociedad de frontera de Ribacoa Fueros y modelos de poblamiento PDF Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto 15 783 800 ISSN 0871 164X Fonseca Moreton Emilio 2004 Viviendas de judios y conversos en Galicia y el Norte de Portugal PDF Anuario Brigantino 27 Lopez Melero Raquel 1988 Viriatus Hispanieae Romulus PDF Espacio tiempo y forma Serie II Historia antigua 1 247 262 ISSN 1130 1082 Martin Lopez David 2012 Consideraciones esteticas en la restauracion del patrimonio masonico analisis historico y perspectivas de futuro PDF Revista de Patrimonio Historico Archived from the original PDF on 13 June 2013 Retrieved 14 July 2013 Pastor Munoz Mauricio 2009 Viriato en el ambito ursonense PDF Cuadernos de los Amigos de los Museos de Osuna 11 40 51 ISSN 1697 1019 Perez Vilatela Luciano 2000 Lusitania historia y etnologia Real Academia de la Historia ISBN 9788489512689 Sanchez Moreno Eduardo 2002 Algunas notas sobre la guerra como estrategia de interaccion social en la Hispania prerromana Viriato jefe redistributivo y II PDF Habis 33 141 174 ISSN 0210 7694 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Guarda Municipality official website Guarda Photos Photos from Guarda Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Guarda Portugal amp oldid 1183201319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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