Explore Estremadura and Ribatejo
The small town of MAFRA is utterly dominated by the vast monastery-palace the Mosteriro Palácio Nacional de Mafra which João V – the wealthiest and most extravagant of all Portuguese monarchs – built in emulation of El Escorial in Madrid. It’s only 12km from Ericeira, so makes an easy half-day trip from the coast, or you can see it en route from Lisbon or Sintra. Drivers will also be able to call in at the nearby Tapada de Mafra park and at the craft village at Sobreiro, on the road between Mafra and Ericeira.There’s a turismo in the palace,to the right of the basilica and plenty of cafés and restaurants in and around the square opposite the palace. None in particular stands out, but as Portuguese visitors are in the majority, prices are reasonable.
Read More-
Mosteiro Palácio Nacional de Mafra
Mosteiro Palácio Nacional de Mafra
Begun in 1717 to honour a vow made on the birth of a royal heir, the Mosteiro Palácio Nacional de Mafra was initially intended for just thirteen Franciscan friars. But as wealth poured in from Brazil, João V amplified his plans to include a massive basilica, two royal wings and monastic quarters for hundreds of monks. The result, a fusion of Baroque and Italianate Neoclassicism, was completed in thirteen years and is quite extraordinary – not least the 5200 doorways, 2500 windows and two immense bell towers, each containing over fifty bells. An apocryphal story records the astonishment of the Flemish bell-makers at the size of the order: on their querying it, and asking for payment in advance, Dom João retorted by doubling their price and his original requirement.
The seemingly endless royal apartments are a mix of the tedious and the shocking, the latter most obviously in the Sala dos Troféus, with its furniture (even chandeliers) constructed of antlers and upholstered in deerskin. All the rooms are re-creations from when João VI fled to Brazil in the face of the French advance and took all the furniture and valuables with him. However, there is at least one original piece – the bed in which the last Portuguese monarch, Manuel II, slept the night before he went into exile in England. The undoubted highlight is the magnificent Rococo library, rivalling Coimbra’s in grandeur. Byron, shown the 35,000 volumes by one of the monks, was asked if “the English had any books in their country?” The books are still in place, kept free of insect infestation by a colony of tiny bats that lives in the eaves.
-
Watch out, wolves about
Watch out, wolves about
If you’re touring around Mafra or Ericeira, don’t miss the Iberian Wolf Recovery Centre, sited in a hidden forest valley just 20km north of Lisbon. There are only around three hundred wolves left in the wild in Portugal, mostly in the northern mountains, with another two thousand or so in Spain, and the dozen or so currently living in natural enclosures at the centre were brought here after injury, ill-treatment or capture – they won’t be released again into the wild. The centre is run by the not-for-profit organization Grupo Lobo (wlobo.fc.ul.pt), which campaigns for wolf preservation and public education, and offers guided visits to see the wolves. You’ll get to walk around the enclosures and see some of the wolves up close, and you can then buy as many postcards, T-shirts, key-rings and wolf-adoption packs as you can manage to boost the centre’s funds. They also have a volunteer programme and even overnight accommodation in a self-catering chalet.






