Colares (Sintra)


Colares is a civil parish along the coast of the municipality of Sintra. The population in 2011 was 7,628, in an area of.

History

Even before there was a "Portugal", the region of Colares was a place of human movement and settlement. By the Roman occupation of the Iberian Peninsula, the architecture of Colares was carved by Latin inscriptions, such as one found near the mouth of the Maçãs River: SOLI ET LUNAE CESTIVIUS ACIDIVIS PERENNIS LEG. AVG. PR. PR. PROVINCIAE LUSITANAE.
It was conquered and held by Sigurd I of Norway for a few months in 1108, during the Norwegian Crusade.
After a period of Moorish occupation, armies loyal to Afonso Henriques conquered the region, as a sequence of their victory in Sintra, around 1147. The region remained in the hands of the Crown until 1385, when it was donated by John I to the constable Nuno Álvares Pereira to compensate the mercenary for his support against Castile.
These lands returned to the crown following the death of Infanta Beatrice, mother of Manuel I.
The historical village of Colares, which was important in the nation's pre-history, obtained a foral early after its creation. The parish of Nossa Senhora da Assunção was a bishopric rectory in the old comarca of Torres Vedras, and Colares was the seat of its own municipality, attributed to King Afonso III, in May 1255. A new foral was issued on 10 November 1516 by Manuel I.
In 1801, the municipality of Colares included 1930 inhabitants, and by 1849, it already had 3341 inhabitants.
During the administrative reforms of 24 October 1855, the municipality of Colares was extinguished and the territory integrated into the municipality of Sintra, as a civil parish.
Grapevines are grown directly upon the sand in the Colares DOC, which covers 50 acres of remaining vineyards. In the 1940s, vineyards covered 2,500 acres. Between 1934 and 1994, only the local co-op could use the Colares appellation.
Red wines, which make up 75% of platings, are grown from ramisco grape and are aged over ten years before being marketed. White wines, grown from a local variant of malvasia, are not aged as long. Because phylloxera aphids cannot live on sand, Colares vineyards are some of the only European vines that are not grafted upon American rootstocks.

Geography

The civil parish is located on the western coast of Portugal, and marked by Europe's extreme western extent: Cabo da Roca. Its contains the settlements Almoçageme, Atalaia, Azenhas do Mar, Azóia, Colares, Eugaria, Gigarós, Mucifal, Penedo, Praia das Maçãs and Ulgueira.

Architecture

Prehistoric

Archaeological

Civic

  • Building of Correios, Telégrafos e Telefones de Colares
  • Vila Vitorino
  • Cinema/Theatre Gomes da Silva
  • Cellar of the Viscount Salreu
  • Estate of Quinta do Casas Novas
  • Estate of Quinta da Fonte
  • Estate of Quinta da Fonte Velha
  • Estate of Quinta de Vale Marinha
  • Estate of Quinta do Pé da Serra
  • Estate of Quinta do Rio Milho
  • Estate of Quinta dos Freixes
  • Estate of Quinta Mazziotti/Quinta do França
  • Estate of Quinta Milides
  • Estate of Nossa Senhora de Melides
  • Fountain of Espoujeiro
  • Lighthouse of Cabo da Roca
  • Pillory of Colares
  • Primary School of Azenhas do Mar
  • Residence of Quinta da Bela Vista
  • Residence of Quinta do Cosme
  • Residence of Quinta do Vinagre
  • Residence on Largo do Pelourinho
  • Residence on Largo do Pelourinho
  • Residence on Avenida do Atlântico, 180
  • Residence on Rua da Abreja
  • Residence on Rua da República
  • Residence Saloia
  • Summer cottage of Praia das Maçãs
  • Villa Guida
  • Casino of Praia das Maçãs

Military

  • Castle of Colares

Religious