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- SÃO BRÁS DE ALPORTEL -

The area that is now the municipality of São Brás de Alportel, was also inhabited in prehistoric time and in the days of the Romans.

São Brás de Alportal was the birthplace of the Moorish Poet Ibne Ammar in the 12th century, and by the 16th century this small village already had a hermitage. From the 17th Century onwards is was the summer residence of the bishops of the Algarve, who were drawn to it by its agreeable climate, and in the 19th century it became the crossroads of the routes linking Loulé to Tavira and Faro to Almodôvar.

The extensive plantations of cork oak provided a springboard for commercial and industrial development and for years São Brás de Alportel was the biggest cork - producing centre in Portugal and the world. Its increasing population and economic importance lead to the creation of the municipality in 1914.

The gradual transfer of the cork manufacturing industry to the centre and the north of Portugal has prompted the municipality in recent decades to diversify its sources of economic prosperity.

- Places to see -

Main Church

Built on the site of a church that probably dates back to the 15th century, the current structure was built after the earthquake of 1755. It was extended considerably in the 19th century. The interior has little architectural interest. The chapel of Senhor dos Passos (Lord of the Stations of the Cross) contains gilded carvings in the taste of the second half of the 18th Century and there are paintings from the 17th century depicting saints. Among the statues to be seen are the arcanjo São Miguel (Archangel Michael), São Libório (St. Liborius) and Santa Eurémia, (St. Euphemia) dating back the 18th century? The statues in the sacristy are from the same period. In the baptistery there is a neo-classical retable in marble. The churchyard has spectacular views of the surrounding countryside and sea.

Former Episcopal Palace
Built during the 17th and 18th centuries for the bishops of the Algarve as a place of refuge from the summer heat. The building underwent several modifications in the 19th and 20th centuries, which have altered its structure. What remains of the original palace is only part of the main building and a baroque vaulted fountain with eight spouts.

António Bentes Cultural Centre / Algarvian Costume Ethnographic Museum
This was once the home of wealthy muleteer who grew rich in the cork trade. This building is a good example of bourgeois architecture at the end of the 19th century. This centre also exhibits the typical Algarvean costumes that were worn in the 19th and 20th centuries, including a collection of popular religious sculpture. The old farm buildings contain about 20 old vehicles once used in the Algarve, ranging from carriages and buggies which were the favored means of transport of the wealthy and the mule carts and ox-drawn wagons used by farmers and farm laborers. This museum also includes an exhibition of the typical agricultural implements and an area dedicated to the cork industry.

 
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