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Silves - The Castle


From archaeological excavations, it is assumed that the first fortress on this site consisted of a Lusitanian castro. It is believed that Phoenicans, Greeks and Carthaginians traversed the site at one time, but that around 201 B.C. the Romans conquered Silves, transforming it into a citadel of their occupation, and commercial center that prospered for the next five centuries.
The fortification occupies an area of about 12,000 m², constituting a typical example of the Islamic military architecture, erected with the use of mud, covered with sandstone, abundant material in the region and that gives it a reddish tonality.
PIP , please.
The fortification occupies an area of about 12,000 m², constituting a typical example of the Islamic military architecture, erected with the use of mud, covered with sandstone, abundant material in the region and that gives it a reddish tonality.
PIP , please.
Pics-UM, Erhard Bernstein, Andy Rodker, Gilbert H and 12 other people have particularly liked this photo
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J. Gafarot club has replied to Xata clubAround 716, the Visigothic citadel was conquered by the the Umayyad Caliphate who reinforced the existing fortifications with a new series of walls. This new period resulted in a great period of development, under the Moorish occupiers, that include the extensive walls in the west. In 1160, it was sacked by Ferdinand I of León and Castile, but remained only for a short time in the hand of the Christians: it was quickly recaptured by the Moors. King Sancho I of Portugal, supported by the powerful Crusader army, conquered the city, after a prolong encirclement in 1189. But, a grande army, under orders from Amir al-Mu'minin, in 1191, retook the city. The buildings of the Taifa kingdoms of the 11th century, which includes the Palace of Balconies (where Al-Mutamid, lived as the poet Ibn Amarhe) progressed in the 11th century. The walls and towers that today represent the Castle of Silves came from these campaigns and public works by Almoravides and Almohads in the 12th and 13th centuries.[1][2] The castles internal water catchment, and large rain fed underground cistern were used to provide freshwater for the surrounding dwellings (to as late as the 1920s). It would only be in the 13th century, during the reign of Afonso III of Portugal, that forces under the command of D. Paio Peres Correia, would definitively take the fortress.
Xata club has replied to J. Gafarot clubHappy new week:)
J. Gafarot club has replied to Annemarie clubEnjoy a new sunny week you too.
Here they talk of 23 Celsius...
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Thank you for the note José.
J. Gafarot club has replied to ZulmaThey are Insuportáveis as they say here…
Buenos dias senhora.
Bye Zulma ( this thing doesn´t let me put the~over the n.
Forget it.
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