Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Anta Do Tapadao

Now in the northern Alentaje, there was another huge dolmen to see, the Anta do Tapadao. This one was relatively easy to find, signed, even, and on a paved road. We have been very impressed by megalithic Portugal, both by the numerous sites and by their relative accessibility. The Alentaje was a megalithic center no less than the other great ones, and much remains to be discovered and understood.














The Alentaje west of the mountainous border with Spain is a big rock wonderland,
glaciers passing by, leaving huge rocks, precariously balanced sometimes, beached
whales, and other zoomorphic curiosities, we speculate; and, perhaps, easy work
for the megalith builders

This goes on for miles upon miles


Typical

Anyhow, after closing the gate and walking a bit, there is the day's megalithic goal,
the great Anta do Tapadao

Right next to it, a zoomorphic wonder, the Dragon of San Miguel (it's a dragon's
head, snout to the right, an eye in the center...)

Anyhow, back to the Anta, which is huge

A very deep chamber


Capstone

Me, for scale; the thing is a monster

Terrain

Vicki by the dragon

Entrance to the dolmen

Other views


The Dragon again

Convento De Cristo, 2

Continuing our tour of the Convento de Cristo in Tomar...
Renaissance staircase to the upper floor of one
of the many cloisters



















Downward view

View of cloister

Others

The church, rotunda at far end

Closer-up of the "other" door; note everyone
is reading
 
Now in one of the dormitory areas

Another cloister hall

The very famous Manueline window; very
late Gothic

Closer-up...much Portuguese imagery...cork
tree, maravelle, seafaring imagery, etc.; did I
mention that Henry the Navigator was Grand
Master of the order and that it achieved
perhaps its greatest victories under him?

Gothic bit

One of not many funny faces

One of the most interesting items--several large pieces of
obviously Roman floor mosaic on (undesignated) display in
one of the rooms

Now in one of the several gift shoppes; mostly warfare

And a nice selection of Portuguese wines

Including Templar wines!

Convento De Cristo, 1

We took Jane's advice and back-tracked 30 miles or so to Tomar to see the Convento de Cristo, the World Heritage castle and convent that dates from the 12th century. The site was the work of the Knights Templar, who, along with the Teutonic Knights and the Knights Hospitallier were among the most famous international military orders of the high middle ages. Yes, military orders, religious military orders, as defended and justified by no less than the pope-maker Bernard of Clairvaux. The Knights Templar were founded in Jerusalem in the early 1100s and had several notable victories against Saladin, who, alas, ultimately prevailed. They were a sort of Christian kamikaze corps who thought nothing of 90% casualties. "Merely a flesh wound." Their mission was to hold Jerusalem, protect Christian pilgrims, and most importantly, protect Christian pilgrims' property. For this latter, they became bankers, of a sort, devising letters of credit whereby the wealthy pilgrim could deposit funds in his home town but draw funds (from Templar ATMs) on the way to the Holy Land. As soldiers they were moderately successful for a time, but as bankers, they were spectacularly successful, becoming spectacularly wealthy, as religious orders did in those times. And as happened with the other orders in the later middle ages, their great wealth and power aroused the envy and enmity of kings, particularly Philip of France, who accused them of heresy (and much, much worse, unmentionable here) and ultimately persuaded the puppet-pope to have them disbanded and their properties transferred "elsewhere." This worked well for France, but in Portugal, King Dinis was a Templar fan, especially since, having failed to hold the Holy Land, the Templars were now involved in the Iberian re-conquista. So he merely changed their name from Knights Templar to Knights of Christ, and everything carried on as if nothing had happened. Sort of like Sambo's morphing into Denny's. Anyhow, that is the gist of it (thank you, Wikipedia) although there much more, actually interesting, to me, on the Web. And elsewhere.

Castle wall; note inclined buttressing structure...inclined
so as to prevent siege engines from nudging up against the
walls; so , I wonder, why didn't Gondor think of this in
Return of the King?

















Christian arrow slit things in the walls

In the castle, approaching the convento...remember the rotunda...
muy importante

Ruined bits of the castle

The other Manueline door; impressive enough
for me; we'll see a closer up later, and also the
famous Manueline door

The first of several cloisters

Gorgeous everywhere

Double-decker Gothic cloister


Another view of the famous Knights' Rotunda

Now approaching the Knights' Rotunda, from
the nave of the church (rather like the Aachen
cathedral, methinks)

Within; designed with the Holy Sepulchre in
Jerusalem in mind

Over the top eastern...

Although the rotunda is 12th century, the paintings in it are
mostly 15th-16th...here is St. Anthony preaching to the fish
(St. Francis had already done the birds)

But some of it is much, much older...here, a very old St.
Christopher

Abiding images of an incredible place...