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Loriga

Loriga
Parish
PanoramaLoriga.jpg
Coat of arms of Loriga
Coat of arms
Loriga is located in Portugal
Loriga
Loriga
Coordinates: 40°19′26″N 7°41′28″W / 40.324°N 7.691°W / 40.324; -7.691Coordinates: 40°19′26″N 7°41′28″W / 40.324°N 7.691°W / 40.324; -7.691
Country Portugal
Region Centro
Subregion Serra da Estrela
Intermunic. comm. Beiras e Serra da Estrela
District Guarda
Municipality Seia
Area
 • Total 36.25 km2 (14.00 sq mi)
Elevation 750 m (2,460 ft)
Population (2011)
 • Total 1,053
 • Density 29/km2 (75/sq mi)
Postal code 6270
Area code 238
Patron Santa Maria Maior
Website http://www.loriga.info

Loriga (Portuguese pronunciation: [luˈɾiɡɐ]) is a civil parish (Portuguese: freguesia) in south-central part of the municipality of Seia, in central Portugal. Part of the district of Guarda, it is 20 km away from the city of Seia, 40 km away from Viseu, 80 km away from Guarda and 320 km from Lisbon, nestled in the Serra da Estrela mountain range. The population in 2011 was 1,053, in an area of 36.25 km², including the two localities/villages of Loriga and Fontão.

Loriga was founded along a column between ravines where today the historic centre exists. The site was ostensibly selected more than 2600 years ago, owing to its defensibility, the abundance of potable water and pasturelands, and lowlands that provided conditions to practice both hunting and gathering/agriculture.

When the Romans arrived in the region, the settlement was concentrated into two areas. The larger, older and principal agglomeration was situated in the area of the main church and Rua de Viriato, fortified with a wall and palisade. The second group, in the Bairro de São Ginês, were some small homes constructed on the rocky promintory, which were later appropriated by the Visigoths in order to construct a chapel. The 1st century Roman road and two bridges (the second was destroyed in the 17th century after flooding) connected the outpost of Lorica to the rest of their Lusitanian province. The barrio of São Ginês (São Gens), a local ex-libris, is the location of the chapel of Nossa Senhora do Carmo, an ancient Visigothic chapel. São Gens, a Celtic saint, martyred in Arles na Gália, during the reign of Emperor Diocletian, and over time the locals began to refer to this saint as São Ginês, due to its easy of pronunciation.


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