LISBON, Portugal: For anyone considering a trip to a European city,
Lisbon
perhaps isn’t a destination that springs immediately to mind. The
Portuguese capital’s singular charms, however, are drawing an increasing
number of visitors.
The port city on Europe’s southwestern edge can’t boast the scale or
variety of, say, Paris or London. What it offers is a small scale suited
to walkers, a sedate pace of life, little crime and lots of history.
The famously hospitable Portuguese are another asset, and the
restaurants can lay on exceptional fish and seafood from the Atlantic.
During the Age of Exploration 500 years ago, when
Portugal led
Europe out of the Mediterranean and established an empire spanning from Latin America across
Africa
to Asia, Lisbon was one of the world’s wealthiest cities. The massive
1755 earthquake – so catastrophic that it helped change the course of
western European thought – destroyed many of the greatest Lisbon
monuments.
Though the city swiftly modernized after Portugal joined the European
Union a quarter century ago, it has retained an old-time attractiveness
as well as a beguiling blend of people from the country’s former
colonies in Africa, India and Brazil.
BELEMThe
Belem
neighborhood, on the north bank of the Tagus River, was the launch pad
for the great Portuguese ships and dauntless mariners who set off to
discover the world beyond the horizon in the 15th and 16th centuries.
Belem, which translates as Bethlehem (the voyages had a strong
religious component), has the Jeronimos monastery and church from 1601,
broad gardens, and a large marble map on the riverbank showing the
places the Portuguese encountered, and when, as they radiated across the
globe. The Portuguese like to think of it as the ground zero of
globalization.
The Monument to the Discoveries features statues of national heroes
such as Vasco da Gama. The local pastry shops sell the famous, and
irresistible, Portuguese custard tarts.
Across the river, next to the
April 25 Bridge that bears a striking resemblance to San Francisco’s
Golden Gate, a giant statue of Christ overlooks the city, its arms open.
ALFAMAThe Alfama quarter is distinguished by its narrow, cobbled
streets on the hillside below Lisbon castle, where archaeologists have
found traces of occupation dating from the seventh century B.C. Once
home to medieval Jewish and Moorish settlements, the quarter has an
endearing shabbiness and lived-in feel. Walking through the quiet
streets often involves ducking under washing hung out to dry and
slaloming between smoky barbecues where fish is being grilled.
BAIXAThe downtown district, called the Baixa, was rebuilt after the
1755 quake in what for Portugal is a rare gridiron pattern. Many
old-fashioned stores, as well as modern international chains, line the
streets.
Look down at your feet and admire the sidewalks decorated in the
black-and-white patterns of traditional Portuguese paving, which is also
found in Salvador de Bahia,
Brazil and Macau, in China.
Rua Augusta, a pedestrians-only street, links two main squares – Rossio
and the riverside Praca do Comercio, where government offices have
moved out to make way for al fresco cafes and restaurants.
CHIADOThe Chiado quarter’s heyday was in the late 19th-century
Belle Epoque
when writers and artists gathered at its cafes. Outside the Cafe A
Brasileira, a statue of Fernando Pessoa, Portugal’s best-known
20th-century poet who also wrote in English, is one of the city’s
most-photographed sights.
A 1988 fire damaged many historic buildings. The reconstruction was
overseen by Alvaro Siza Vieira, who has won the world’s top architecture
prizes, and the quarter has preserved its elegant, sophisticated
atmosphere.
PAULA REGO MUSEUMPaula Rego is one of Portugal’s most famous modern
artists. She fled Antonio Salazar’s dictatorship, which ruled over
Portugal for four decades in the last century, and settled in London in
the 1950s but her work still draws powerfully on Portuguese culture and
her childhood memories around Cascais, a seaside town just outside
Lisbon where some of her work is housed.
The 30-minute train ride from the capital traces the coast’s contours,
with magnificent views over the Atlantic. Cascais also offers beaches
and a long promenade.
No comments:
Post a Comment