Castle of Melgaço

The Melgaço Castle is located in Vila parish, Melgaço municipality, Viana do Castelo district, in Portugal.

Main defense raiana the Alto Minho in the twelfth century, it constitutes the most northern sentry Portugal, in the section where the river Minho starts its border function, guarding the crossing to Galicia.

History

Early History

There is no information on early human occupation.

Medieval Era

The construction of the castle dates back to 1170 by order of the first King of Portugal Afonso Henriques (1112–1185). He granted a Foral charter to the town at the same time, encouraging the development of the town.

Afonso III (1248–1279) granted to the village in 1258 a second Foral Charter, promising privilegs to the town.

In 1361 the traffic between Portugal and Galicia should be done mandatorily by Melgaço since revealing its importance at the time.

In the context of the 1383-1385 Portuguese succession crisis, the village and its castle followed the northern trend of Portugal by expressing the loyalty to Beatriz. It fell into Spanish hands but in early 1387, then governed by a Spanish mayor, the town suffered the harassment of the Portuguese troops under the command of John I (1385–1433), from the fall to the end of an undaunted resistance nearly two months.

In 1492, Melgaço was one of only five places along the Spanish-Portuguese border provided for entry of the Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain. Still under the reign of King Manuel I, village defenses and its castle layout are figured in the Duarte de Armas (Book of Fortresses, c. 1509), made up of three towers and two gates.

Modern Day

It is classified as a National Monument by decree published on June 23, 1910, and the wall of the village been classified in the same way, with publication on February 19, 1926.[1]

The intervention of the government, however, only came to be felt in the 1960s, keeping the construction characteristics of the set. Recently, with the development of the village's historic core recovery projects, the keep of the castle was reclassified as a museum center, exposing the testimonies obtained by archaeological research.[2]

Architecture

The castle has plant in circular shape, unusual in the country, divided into three precincts. The walls, where they tear two doors are surmounted by prismatic battlements and reinforced by three towers, the main one being that is focused on the urban core, pentagonal section. The set is dominated by the keep. The keep has a square shaped plan, isolated in the center of the parade ground. Both she and the surrounding wall were fully rebuilt, inferring to its Romanesque feature only the design of this set: a solid square tower isolated in the center of the walled enclosure. The tower is divided internally into three floors, illuminated by some chinks. The crown is made by a shot in counter with battlements, now reclassified as lookout of the archaeological museum established in the tower dependencies. Regarding the doors, they are two: the main gate to the west, larger, go to the square of weapons, which opens a cistern, where he would find the commander's residence; and the betrayal door to the north, smaller. They remain part of the Barbican on the main door and towers that flanked one of the doors of the fence. Thanks to recent archaeological research, which laid bare significant stretches of gothic fence, we can now make the idea of the original design.[3]

References

  1. "DGPC | Pesquisa Geral". www.patrimoniocultural.pt. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  2. "DGPC | Pesquisa Geral". www.patrimoniocultural.pt. Retrieved 2016-04-03.
  3. "MELGAÇO - defesa e morfologia urbana". Issuu. Retrieved 2016-04-03.

External links

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