Bettencourt Palace
Palace Bettencourt (Palácio Bettencourt) | |
Palace (Palácio) | |
![]() The main entrance to public library and regional archive which was installed in the Palace Bettencourt during the 20th century | |
Official name: Palácio Bettencourt/Biblioteca Pública e Arquivo Regional de Angra do Heroísmo | |
Named for: Bettencourt Family | |
Country | ![]() |
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Autonomous region | ![]() |
Group | Central |
Island | Terceira |
Municipality | Angra do Heroísmo |
Coordinates | 38°39′17.11″N 27°13′15.17″W / 38.6547528°N 27.2208806°WCoordinates: 38°39′17.11″N 27°13′15.17″W / 38.6547528°N 27.2208806°W |
Length | 40.75 m (134 ft), Southwest-Northeast |
Width | 38.75 m (127 ft), Northwest-Southeast |
Style | Medieval |
Owner | Portuguese Republic |
For public | Public |
Easiest access | Rua da Rosa, 49; Rua da Carreira de Cavalos |
Management | Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico |
Operator | Biblioteca Pública e Arquivo Regional de Angra do Heroísmo |
Status | Property of Public Interest |
Listing | Resolution of the President of the Regional Government, 28/1980; JORAA, Série I, 15 (29 April 1980); Included in the Central Zone of Angra do Heroismo (PT071901160035) |
Wikimedia Commons: Palácio Bettencourt | |
The Palace Bettencourt (Portuguese: Palácio Bettencourt) is a former-residence, and current seat of the public library and regional archive, in the civil parish, in the municipality of Angra do Heroísmo, in the Portuguese archipelago of the Azores.
History
![](../I/m/Palacio_bettencourt_1.jpg)
It is likely that the building was constructed sometime between the end of the 17th and beginning of the 18th century.[1]
Alterations to the interior and exterior occurred sometime between the 18th and 19th century, at the point when Francisco António de Araújo e Azevedo, then 7th Captain-General of the Azores was in power (the last during the absolutist regime).[1][2]
Following the fire at the Episcopal Palace, on 31 July 1885, the bishop moved his residence to the Bettencourt palace.[1]
D. Francisco José Ribeiro Vieira de Brito organized a banquet in order to hommage Augusto Castilho, commander of the corvette Duque Terceira on 21 May 1896.[1]
Owing to an epidemic of typhus in the seminary at the Convent of São Francisco resulted in the move of the Lyceum of Angra to the palace.[1] The bishop, who continued to live at the Palace to this period, transferred his residence to Rua D. Amélia, 74.[1] This move lasted until 1913, when the Lyceum was returned to the Convent.[1]
It was sometime in the 20th century, that the facade was remodelled, leading in 1956 to the installation of the public library.[1]
The palace was classified by a resolution-in-council (126/2004) on 9 September 2004, and included within the historical classification of the historic centre of Angra.[1] Three years later, in February, there was a presentation of a public project for a new building for the library and regional archive for Angra.[1]
Architecture
![](../I/m/Palacio_bettencourt_2.jpg)
![](../I/m/Pal%C3%A1cio_Bettencourt_(Biblioteca_P%C3%BAblica_de_Angra)_-_Sala.jpg)
The building is located in a central place, in the city of Angra do Heroísmo, on a subtle declive, with its lateral wings sitting flush with its neighbours.[1] To the south is a small garden, with rectangular wing, while to the front is the Cathedral of the Santíssimo Salvador; and around it are various residences of notable architectural interest, including the palacete Violante Castro.[1]
The principal doorway is framed and decorated with sculpted stone, and surmounted by a large rectangular cartouche with the coat-of-arms of the Bettencourt family.[1]
The architecture conforms to a 17th-century noble residence, in an irregular "L"-shaped plan, integrating a rectangular tower with two-story facade, separated by frizes and with pilastered corners.[1] There are many decorative elements constructed in basalt, such as the frames, rectangular windows and ornate door.[1] The main facade is marked by picture windows on the first floor and several friezes and cornices over the coat-of-arms of the family.[1] Its interior includes a central vestibule, open to the front by arched entrance over pilasters, from which was constructed a staircase.[1]
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Noé, Paula (2012), SIPA, ed., Palácio Bettencourt / Biblioteca Pública e Arquivo Regional de Angra do Heroísmo (IPA.00008157/PT071901160025) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 30 March 2014
- ↑ Francisco António de Araújo e Azevedo was substituted in 1820, by Francisco de Borja Garção Stockler, but remained on the island owing to his family relations. He was killed on 3 April 1821, for leading a Liberal uprising at the Fortress of São João Baptista
- Sources
- Angra do Heroísmo: Janela do Atlântico entre a Europa e o Novo Mundo (in Portuguese), Horta (Azores), Portugal: Direcção Regional do Turismo dos Açores
- Dias, Pedro (2008), Arte de Portugal no Mundo - Açores (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Público - Comunicação Social S.A.
- Oliveira, Carlos Guedes; Lucas, Arcindo R.A.; Guedes, J.H. Correia; Andrade, Rui (1992), Metodologias para a quantificação dos dados observados no parque monumental, in 10 Anos após o sismo dos Açores de 1 de Janeiro de 1980 2, Lisbon, Portugal, pp. 743–791