Castle of Aljezur (Castelo de Aljezur) | |
castle (Castelo) | |
The location of the Castle of Aljezur on the hilltop overlooking the village of town of Aljezur
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Name origin: Aljezur | |
Country | Portugal |
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Region | Algarve |
Subregion | Algarve |
District | Faro |
Municipality | Aljezur |
Location | Aljezur |
- elevation | 49 m (161 ft) |
- coordinates | 37°18′58.83″N 8°48′17.87″W / 37.3163417°N 8.8049639°WCoordinates: 37°18′58.83″N 8°48′17.87″W / 37.3163417°N 8.8049639°W |
Length | 63.55 m (208 ft), Northwest-Southeast |
Width | 75.91 m (249 ft), Southwest-Northeast |
Architects | unknown |
Style | Medieval |
Material | Stone masonry |
Origin | Neolithic |
- Initiated | 10th Century |
Owner | Portuguese Republic |
For public | Public |
Easiest access | Rua Cerro do Castelo |
Management | Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico |
Operator | Câmara Municipal de Aljezur |
Status |
Property of Public Interest Imóvel de Interesse Público |
Listing | Decree 129/77; DR226, 29 September 1977 |
The Castle of Aljezur (Portuguese: Castelo de Aljezur) is a medieval castle founded in the parish of Aljezur, in the municipality of the same name overlooking the Aljezur River . Excavations in the castle have discovered that the location was occupied during the Bronze and Iron Ages, while the parade grounds, habitational structures, and two silos date to the 12th and 13th centuries.
The site of the castle was occupied, successively and uninterrupted by Lusitanians, who constructed a castro to oversee their lands, before being pushed aside by the Romans, who constructed a lookout. By the 7th-8th century, the Visigoths also used the space as a sentry to safeguard their territory.
By the beginning of the 10th century, a small town was founded by Arabs, who reformulated their defences, constructing various dependencies within and outside the walls. Of these constructions, only the cistern in the castle survives their period of occupation. The castle was part of the Moorish defensive line of Silves, during the Almohad Caliphate and era of the Iberian taifas.
In 1242 (or 1246), Aljezur was conquered by knights loyal to Paio Peres Correia. As legend suggests, the conquest of the castle aided by a Moorish woman, who betrayed her fellow countrymen and delivered the citadel into the hands of the knights The Lenda of Maira Aires, also suggests that the castle was taken by Paio Correia on 24 June, on the feast day of the village's patron saint. Its occupation did not result in the partial or total destruction of the castle, although alterations to the fortress occurred in the first decades of its Christian occupation.
Following the 1267 Treaty of Badajoz, the castle and other fortresses along the Algarve were transferred into the dominion of the King Afonso III of Portugalby Alfonso X of Castile. King Denis of Portugal issued a foral (charter) to the region of Aljezur on 12 November 1280, while staying in Estremoz. Thirty years later, the monarch bartered away the Castle of Aljezur and other lands for the town of Almada (1 December 1297).