Alcácer do Sal

Alcácer do Sal
Municipality

Alcácer do Sal, along the Sado River, showing the Reconquista Moorish Castle

Flag

Coat of arms
Coordinates: 38°22′21″N 8°30′49″W / 38.37250°N 8.51361°W / 38.37250; -8.51361Coordinates: 38°22′21″N 8°30′49″W / 38.37250°N 8.51361°W / 38.37250; -8.51361
Country  Portugal
Region Alentejo
Subregion Alentejo Litoral
Intermunic. comm. Alentejo Litoral
District Setúbal
Parishes 4
Government
  President Pedro Manuel Igrejas da Cunha Paredes (PS)
Area
  Total 1,499.87 km2 (579.10 sq mi)
Elevation 49 m (161 ft)
Population (2011)
  Total 13,046
  Density 8.7/km2 (23/sq mi)
Time zone WET/WEST (UTC+0/+1)
Postal code 7580
Area code 265
Patron São João Baptiste
Website http://www.cm-alcacerdosal.pt/

Alcácer do Sal (Portuguese pronunciation: [ɐɫˈkasɛɾ ðu ˈsaɫ]) is a municipality in Portugal, located in Setúbal District. The population in 2011 was 13,046,[1] in an area of 1499.87 km².[2]

History

Historical boat along the Sado River in the town of Alcácer do Sal
Qaşr Abī Dānis or Al Qaşr (English: The Castle), surmounting the town, was a Moorish citadel before the Reconquista
Santa Maria do Castelo, in the city square of Alcácer

Earliest settlement

There has been human settlement in the area for more than 40,000 years; archaeological investigations have placed human presence here back to the Mesolithic Period, when the first peoples began to concentrate in the areas around Alcácer. This period was characterized by exploitation of the ecosystem in the Sado Estuary, when the river extended to São Romão, involving fishing, scavenging for shellfish, hunting and foraging in the local forests. The primitive tools, made from chert, were adapted from the techniques of the late Paleolithic era. By the late Mesolithic period, people had concentrated in the area of Comporta and Torrão, later establishing primitive defensive protection to support its communities.

These principal settlements were abandoned by the Copper Age, but repopulated during the Iron Age, as was the case of Alcácer. Mediterranean trade, pioneered by the Phoenicians, introduced commercial colonies in Abul and Alcácer (then referred to as Bevipo or Keition), where a written alphabet and currency allowed commerce to flourish.

Roman Era

After the Third Punic War, with the fall of Carthage, Alcácer was annexed to the Roman Empire (around 1st-2nd century B.C.). The region of Alcácer became known as Urbs Imperatoria Salacia in honor of the nymph, and wife of Neptune, Salacia, for its importance in the Iberian salt trade and the number of routes that crossed the area.[3] Salatia suffered many of the problems that developed from the Roman urbes localized between Atlantic routes and Romanized northern Europe, and was made incrementally worse by Claudius' initiatives into England and Wales. These problems changed during the 3rd Century, when the port of Salatia was devalued, in favor of Olisipo (Lisbon).

With the rise of Gaul, most of Hispania became a vassal state of the larger empire. Returning to the Imperial fold with the reorganization of Roman territories by Diocletian (in order to subvert the Military Anarchy that existed at the time), Salatia's role was transformed. In the following centuries, Salatia became a poor distant colony of the much larger centers of Setúbal or Lisbon. The only exception was Torrão, which continued to prosper. Until 711, when the region was annexed by the Umayyad Caliphate of Damascus, the population of the hilltop areas of Salatia left in favor of the low lands along the river.

Al-Andalus

The Ummayad rule on the Iberian Peninsula, in the reign of Abu-l-Khattar (743-745) over the region of Beja, which included Alcácer, was noted for the recruitment of troops, and for the rising power of Yemeni clans in southern Portugal. The entire region was later administered by Egyptian Arab troops, that selected Beja as their regional seat. Until 844, Alcácer functioned as center for the collection of taxes in the lower Sado valley: collected primarily from the Christians who chose to remain in the valley. The first Viking raids in this year forced a political reorganization, and Alcácer became an important outpost of Al-Andalus.

After an internal victory over Muladi rebels in 888, the city was offered as reward to the Abu Denis clan, and its keep was renamed Qaşr Abī Dānis (قصر أبي دانس ; English: Castle Abu Denis),[4] commonly known simply as Al Qaşr (English: The Castle). The village of Al Qaşr was the base for a large fleet and arsenal that was used during the Christian-Moorish Reconquista.[5] In 997 a Moorish fleet transported troops from Alcácer to Oporto, to support Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir, that culminated in the destruction of the sanctuary of Santiago de Compostela.[6] It was then capital of the Al Qaşr Province, which by the 12th Century was a center of merchant traffic, supported by the opulent tastes of Évora. Muhammad al-Idrisi noted that forestry, and in particular pine tree harvesting, was important during this period, as was cattle raising and major agricultural cultivation.[5] During the Almoravid dynasty Al Qasr became the administrative regional seat of an area that extended along the Atlantic coast until Trujillo, Cáceres.[6]

Crusades

Records of the Norwegian Crusade, held from 1107 to 1110, in the aftermath of the First Crusade, and led by Norwegian king Sigurd I, include a reference to the Norwegians winning a battle in the town of Alkasse (which is possibly a reference to Al Qaşr) - where they killed such a large number of people that the town was said to have been left empty, and looted many treasures.[7] However, the Norwegians then sailed on to the Holy Land and the town - with whatever inhabitants survived - remained Muslim.

During the Fifth Crusade, when Afonso II of Portugal had a truce with the Almohads, the familial Sueiro Bishops of Lisbon and Évora joined the Cistercian abbot of Alcobaça, the commander of Palmela, the Templars, the Hospitallers, and magnates, in an attempt to persuade the crusaders to attack the Moors in Alácer do Sal. The regional seat of Alcácer had been lost since 1191 after several battles.[8] The Crusaders departed for the Holy Land, even after being provided food, expenses, and rousing oratories about the Almohads' annual demands for 100 Christians in tribute.[9] Meanwhile, ships sent by Frederick II (the Holy Roman Emperor) to join 80 ships already travelling to the Holy Land, arrived in Alácer do Sal, and on 2 August 1217 they were joined by Portuguese sent to lay siege to the castle.[9] Muslim governors in Seville, Córdoba, Jaén and Badajoz attempted to relieve the garrison but their reinforcements were defeated on 11 September. The castle surrendered on 18 October 1217, with additional Christian troops provided by Pedro Alvítiz from Spain, as well as "divine intervention".[10][11]

Once the castle was taken, many of the northern Crusaders requested Pope Honorious III allow them to remain for a year "for the liberation of Spain" and "the extirpation of the perfidious cult of the pagans". The victory in Alcácer do Sal also motivated Alfonso IX of León, Sancho II of Navarre, in addition to Spanish prelates and nobles, to break their truces with the Muslim leaders, in hopes that the northern Crusaders would continue their campaigns the following summer. But, the Pope granted only absolution from their vows to those who could not continue to the Holy Land, and the Crusaders left the Castle to the Portuguese and continued on to Acre.[10]

Al Qaşr, which was the only true success in the Fifth Crusade,[10] was transliterated into Latin phonetics and "Sal" (from the former Roman name Salatia) was appended to the toponymy. In 1218, it received its foral from King Afonso II, and handed over to the Knights of Santiago, who made it their headquarters during their advance into the Alentejo and Algarve.[10] The Order of Santiago dominated an area from Sesimbra until the Algarve, controlling the lower Sado, Alentejo Litoral and coast of Cape St. Vincent.[6] At the end of the 13th century, the Order advanced to Mértola to support reconquest of the Algarve, but later retreated to Alcácer and remained there until 1482, when they returned to Palmela.[6]

Along with the Christians and the town's small population of Jews, the remaining Muslims in Alácer do Sal begin to occupy the low country along the river, and vacate the Castle. The Muslims, under the "King's protection" remained in the community.[6]

In 1495, Manuel I was acclaimed King by the residents of the village.

Slave trade

By the 16th century, the whole Sado Basin, where Alcácer do Sal is located, had experienced an important African immigration as a way to compensate for the demographic deficit that accompanied the Portuguese overseas expansion. Later, in the 18th century, a new wave of slaves was recruited to Alcácer do Sal to work the salt fields and cultivate rice, the two important economic activities in the region. A recent genetic study in 2010 found in Alcacer the highest frequencies (22%) of Sub-Saharan maternal lineages reported so far in Europe and, according to the authors, likely associated with the influx of African slaves between the 15th and 19th centuries.[12][13]

Geography

Physical geography

Alcácer do Sal, showing portions of the river and estuary
The main town, along the Sado River showing main avenue and walkway
The city seen from the Sado River
The city along the city center

A few kilometres from the city of Alcácer, along the course of the Sado, is the Reserva Natural do Estuário do Sado (Sado Estuary Nature Reserve) which covers an area of 23.160 hectares (231,600 m2), comprising marshes, canals, streams and mangroves.

Human geography

The municipality is bounded to the north by the municipalities of Palmela, Vendas Novas and Montemor-o-Novo; northeast by Viana do Alentejo; east by Alvito; south by Ferreira do Alentejo and Grândola; to the west, also by Grândola, along a branch of the Sado Estuary; and northwest by the Setúbal.

Alcácer do Sal is a historical city and municipality that overlooks the Sado River; its medieval town developed from barrios that surrounded an ancient Muslim castle. Alcácer do Sal is the municipal seat, which includes two civil parishes, both having a population of 6002 residents.[14]

The second-largest municipality (Portuguese: concelho) in the country, it is administratively subdivided into four civil parishes (Portuguese: freguesias):[15]

A very interesting museum, documenting the occupation of the city since the Iron Age, exists under the castle, now a pousada hotel. Santa Susana includes many white-painted houses, and is the location of the municipalities principal dam, Pego do Altar, and tourist-friendly water activities and forests.

Architecture

Civic

Military

Religious

Notable citizens

References

Notes
  1. Instituto Nacional de Estatística
  2. Direção-Geral do Território
  3. "Pousada Dom Afonso II, Alcácer do Sal, Portugal". Portugal Virtual. Retrieved 2009-10-09.
  4. Elevação da Vila de Alcácer do Sal à categoria de Cidade Projecto de Lei nº 228/VII
  5. 1 2 Revista popular (16 December 1848), p.329
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Câmara Municipal de Alcácer do Sal, (2007)
  7. Riley-Smith, 1986, p. 132
  8. The keep in Alcácer was conquered for the first time by the Portuguese in 1160. In 1191, it returned to Arab hands under the direction of Ya´qub al-Mansur,who transformed it into the military garrison of Garb al-Andalus. This final Islamic presence lasted until 1217.
  9. 1 2 Joseph F. O'Callaghan (2003), p.79
  10. 1 2 3 4 Joseph F. O'Callaghan (2003), p.80
  11. Joseph F. O'Callaghan (2003) refers to the intervention of a "heavenly host of knights all clad in white" and visions of the "sign of the holy cross in the sky as a sign of [their] victory".
  12. Cruz I, Lucas I, Rosendo MT. 2001. Memorias do instituto de Malariologia de Aguas de Moura: da luta anti-paludica ao museu: Camara Municipalde Palmela CEVDI; Instituto Nacional de Sau´de Dr. Ricardo Jorge
  13. Pereira, V. N.; Gomes, V. N.; Amorim, A. N.; Gusmão, L.; João Prata, M. (September–October 2010). "Genetic characterization of uniparental lineages in populations from Southwest Iberia with past malaria endemicity". American Journal of Human Biology 22 (5): 588–595. doi:10.1002/ajhb.21049. PMID 20737604.
  14. UMA POPULAÇÃO QUE SE URBANIZA, Uma avaliação recente - Cidades, 2004 Nuno Pires Soares, Instituto Geográfico Português (Geographic Institute of Portugal)
  15. Diário da República. "Law nr. 11-A/2013, pages 552 6" (pdf) (in Portuguese). Retrieved 16 July 2014.
Sources

External links

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