Residence of Mesquitela
Residence of Mesquitela (Casa de Mesquitela) | |
Residence (Casa) | |
Named for: Mesquitela | |
Country | Portugal |
---|---|
Region | Centro |
Subregion | Dão-Lafões |
District | Viseu |
Municipality | Carrazeda de Ansiães |
Location | Mesquitela |
- elevation | 46 m (151 ft) |
- coordinates | PT 40°35′6.38″N 7°45′13.46″W / 40.5851056°N 7.7537389°WCoordinates: PT 40°35′6.38″N 7°45′13.46″W / 40.5851056°N 7.7537389°W |
Length | 21.28 m (70 ft), West-East |
Width | 15.28 m (50 ft), Southwest-Northeast |
Architects | unknown |
Materials | Granite, Masonry, Wood, Tile, Azulejo |
Origin | 16th century |
Owner | Portuguese Republic |
For public | Private |
Visitation | Closed |
Easiest access | Mesquitela, Rua Direita, northeast of the Estrada Nacional 232 |
Management | Instituto Gestão do Patrimonio Arquitectónico e Arqueológico |
Status | Property of Public Interest Imóvel de Interesse Público |
Listing | Decree 67/97; Diário da República, 301 (31 December 1997) |
The Residence of Mesquitela (Portuguese: Casa de Mesquitela), is a signeurial building typical of the Beira historical region, in the civil parish of Mesquitela, municipality of Mangualde.
History
Its construction was started and/or completed between the end of the 16th century or beginning of the 17th century, although some suggest the 1500s.[1][2]
By 1678, the house as associated with a Domingos do Amaral.[1]
Alterations were made to the house with the inclusion of a formal chapel in 1722 (from an inscription on the door of the chapel).[1] Sometime during the 18th century it became a headquarters for forces during the third Napoleonic invasion of Portugal.[1]
Similarly, during the Liberal Wars Brigadeir Manuel Cardoso de Faria Pinto, used this reside (where lived at that time) as base during the battles between absolutists and liberals.[1]
On 2 January 1997, from a dispatch of the Ministry of Culture (Portuguese: Ministro da Cultura), the residence was classified as a Property of Public Interest (Portuguese: Imóvel de Interesse Público): since 1988, it had already been adapted as a tourist residence.[1]
Architecture
The residence is into the rural countryside of Mangualde, encircled by walls that divide several patios (with the exception of the western and eastern flanks).[1]
Its horizontal plan is composed of a single floor, divided into various spaces and covered in tile roofing.[1][2] Entrance into the building is made by large portico surmounted with a coat-of-arms framed in sectioned gables, over cornice.[1][2] The coat-of-arms was sculpted in the 18th century, and belongs to the descendents of the Cardosos, Farias, Amarais and Coutos hereditary lines.[2] The doorway gives access to the main courtyard and Couto de Homiziados (a frontier space that provided sanctuary from justice).[1][3] This principal facade is surrounded by porch supported by cylindrical columns with rectangular base.[1]
Doors around the house follow the lintel line, while the sash windows have granite frames, which are repeated all around the property.[1] The rear facade, also with access to the interior, is preceded by five granite steps.
A chapel abuts the lateral facade of the residence, built in 1722 and dedicated to Santo António, with its main entrance topped by a niche with the image of the patron.[1][2] To the right of this portico was originally a pulpit in rock, since removed.[2]
The parcel's surrounding walls have several openings to access the patios.
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Matias, Cecília (1997), SIPA, ed., Casa da Mesquitela (v.PT021806110026) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved 2 April 2012
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Oliveira, Catarina (27 July 2006). GIF/IPPAR, ed. "Casa da Mesquitela" (in Portuguese). Lisbon, Portugal: IGESPAR - Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico. Retrieved 2 April 2012. Check date values in:
|year= / |date= mismatch
(help) - ↑ Margarida Garcez Ventura (1990), p.603-604
- Sources
- Azevedo, Carlos de (1969), Solares Portugueses: Introdução ao estudo da Casa Nobre (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Livros Horizonte
- Binney, Marcus (1987), Casas Nobres de Portugal, Int. de Manuel Pedro Rio de Carvalho (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Difel
- "Mesquitela", Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira (in Portuguese), 13, Lisbon, Portugal: Verbo
- Frazão, A.C. Amaral (1981), Domingos Barreira, ed., Novo Dicionário Corográfico de Portugal (in Portuguese), Porto, Portugal
- "Mesquitela", Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira (in Portuguese), 17, Lisbon, Portugal; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: Ed. Enciclopédia Ldª
- Leal, Pinho (1875), "Mesquitela", Portugal Antigo e Moderno, Dicionário Corográfico... (in Portuguese), 5, Lisbon, Portugal: Liv. Ed. de Mattos Moreira e Cª
- Ventura, Margarida Garcez (1990), "Os Coutos de Homiziados nas Fronteiras com o Direito de Asilo", Revista da Faculdade de Letras (PDF) (in Portuguese), Porto, Portugal: University of Porto, pp. 601–625