Portugal Travel guide
Portugal is around the
size of Scotland with twice the population and has tremendous variety both
geographically and in its ways of life and traditions. Along the coast around
Lisbon, and on the well-developed Algarve in the south, there are highly
sophisticated resorts, while the vibrant capital Lisbon has enough going on to
please most city devotees. But in its rural areas this is still a conspicuously
underdeveloped country, and there are plenty of opportunities to experience
smaller towns and countryside regions that have changed little in the past
century.
In terms of population,
and of customs, differences between the north and south are particularly
striking. Above a line more or less corresponding with the course of the River
Tagus, the people are of predominantly Celtic and Germanic stock. It was here,
at Guimarães, that the "Lusitanian" nation was born, in the wake of the
Christian reconquest from the North African Moors. South of the Tagus, where the
Moorish and Roman civilizations were most established, people tend to be
darker-skinned and maintain more of a "Mediterranean" lifestyle. More recent
events are woven into the pattern. The 1974 revolution came from the south - an
area of vast estates, rich landowners and a dependent workforce - while the
conservative backlash of the 1980s came from the north, with its powerful
religious authorities and individual smallholders wary of change. More
profoundly even than the revolution, emigration has altered people's attitudes
and the appearance of the countryside. After Lisbon, the largest Portuguese
community is in Paris, and there are migrant workers spread throughout France
and Germany. Returning to Portugal, these emigrants have brought in modern ideas
and challenged many traditional rural values.
The greatest of all
Portuguese influences, however, is the sea . The Portuguese are very conscious
of themselves as a seafaring race; mariners like Vasco da Gama led the way in
the exploration of Africa and the Americas, and until less than thirty years ago
Portugal remained a colonial power. The colonies brought African and South
American strands to the country's culture: in the distinctive music of fado ,
sentimental songs heard in Lisbon and Coimbra, for example, or in the
Moorish-influenced and Manueline architecture that abounds in coastal towns like
Belém and Viana do Castelo.
Since Portugal is so
compact, it's easy to take in something of each of its elements. Scenically, the
most interesting parts of the country are in the north: the Minho , green, damp,
and often startling in its rural customs; and the sensational gorge and valley
of the Douro , followed along its course by the railway, off which antiquated
branch lines edge into remote Trás-os-Montes . For contemporary interest, spend
some time in both Lisbon and Porto , the only two cities of real size. And if
it's monuments you're after, the centre of the country - above all, Coimbra and
Évora - retain a faded grandeur. The coast is virtually continuous beach, and
apart from the Algarve and a few pockets around Lisbon and Porto, resorts remain
low-key and thoroughly Portuguese, with great stretches of deserted sands
between them. Perhaps the loveliest are along the northern Costa Verde , around
Viana do Castelo, or, for isolation, the wild beaches of southern
Alentejo
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