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Convento de Cristo & Castelo Templário, Portugal

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Portugal

Central Portugal

Tomar

Pegões Aquaduct

UNESCO World Heritage

Town Map of Tomar

Accommodation in Tomar

Eating Out in Tomar

 

Further Reading

 

 

Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal

The Convento de Cristo and Castelo Templário (Templar Castle) in Tomar, central Portugal began construction in 1160 under the orders of Gualdim de Pais, the provincial Master of the Order of the Knights Templar.

 

The lands on which the Castle and Convent are sited was bequeathed to the Knights Templar by Dom Afonso Henriques, the first king of Portugal.

 

Situated in a strategic location, high on a hill above the River Nabão, the Castelo Templário has a defensive outer wall and a citadel to the interior with a rounded Keep.

The Castle of Tomar was part of the defence system created by the Knights Templar to secure the border the newly formed Kingdom of Portugal against the Moors.

Thanks to this system of construction the Castle of Tomar was able to resist attacks of caliph Abu Yusuf al-Mansur in 1190. Al-Mansur had previously taken other Portuguese strongholds to the South. A commemorative plate of this feat is located near the entrance of the castle church (Porta da Sangue).

The Castle of Tomar became the main headquarters of the Knights Templar not long after the construction finished.  When the Knights Templar were dissolved by Pope Clement V, Dom Dinis of Portugal negotiated to secure the Templar assets and fought for recognition for a new order, the Order of Christ, to inherit them.

 

Thanks to the intervention of Dom Dinis, the Castelo Templário and Convent de Cristo became the permanent home to the Order of Christ, in 1357.

The octagonal church (rotunda) of the Castle of Tomar was completed in the second half of the 12th century and it is said is based on the architecture of the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem, which was mistakenly believed to be by crusaders to be a remnant of the Temple of Solomon.

The church has eight large, stone pillars which allowed the Knights to pray while seated on horseback. One of the most important Grand Masters of the new Order of Christ, Prince Henry the Navigator, ordered the construction of the Claustro de Cemitério (Cemetery Cloister) and the Claustro da Lavagem (Cloister of Washing) as well as general improvements to the town of Tomar itself.

However it was King Manuel I of Portugal, who is most associated with the Convento de Cristo. It was under the orders of the king, who became a grand master of the Order of Christ in 1484, opulent additions to the church and convent were added and spawned the architectural term Manueline. One of the most notable of these is the Chapterhouse window (Janela do Capitulo) which is an intricate work of art celebrating the Age of Discoveries with motifs of coral, ropes and the seal of the Order of Christ.

The  Convent de Cristo has eight cloisters which were constructed during the 15th and 16th centuries, each with their own distinctive style. The Convento also has it's own aqueduct, which was constructed under the orders of King Felipe I of Portugal, providing it's own supply of water.

King Felipe I, also King Filipe II of Spain, was crowned at the Castle of Tomar in 1581 and ensured the construction of Pegões Aqueduct took twenty years, but as a testimony to it's construction it still carries water to the Convento today.

Below the Convent de Cristo and the Castelo Templário is Mata dos Sete Montes (Wood of the Seven Hills), 39 hectares of forest and gardens which belonged to the Order of Christ. The land was used as a retreat by the Order and at the beginning of the 16th century was walled, with irrigation being fed from Pegoes Aqueduct. Today at the entrance is a statue of Henry the Navigator and a formal, French style garden with gravelled paths leading to the forest.

The Convent de Cristo in Tomar was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1983 and receives thousands of visitors each year to marvel at the mix of Renaissance, Gothic, Manueline architectural styles.

Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal Manueline Window at Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal

Cloister of the Cemetery

Maneuline Window (Chapter House)

Convent do Cristo
Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal Convento do Cristo Convento do Cristo Gardens
Cloister of John III Intricate Stone Work Wood of the Seven Hills
Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal Convento do Cristo in Tomar Central Portugal
Stone Gargoyle Carved Belt Buckle Decorative Column
Convento do Cristo Convento do Cristo Convento do Cristo
Dormitories Convento Entrance Kitchens

  Convento de Cristo Hours of Opening & Entrance Fees

October - May  9am to 5pm

June-September - 9am to 6pm

The Castle is closed on the following dates:1 January; Good Friday; Easter Sunday; 1 May; Christmas Day

Adults 4.50€

OAPs 2.25€ (proof of age required)

Location Map of Convento de Cristo

 
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