Portugal // Lisbon

Sintra

As the summer residence of the kings of Portugal, and the Moorish lords of Lisbon before them, SINTRA’s verdant charms have long been celebrated. British travellers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries found a new Arcadia in its cool, wooded heights, recording with satisfaction the old Spanish saying: “To see the world and leave out Sintra is to go blind about.” Byron stayed here in 1809 and began Childe Harold, his great mock-epic travel poem, in which the “horrid crags” of “Cintra’s glorious Eden” form a first location. Writing home, in a letter to his mother, he proclaimed the village:

…perhaps in every aspect the most delightful in Europe; it contains beauties of every description natural and artificial. Palaces and gardens rising in the midst of rocks, cataracts and precipices, convents on stupendous heights, a distant view of the sea and the Tagus…it unites in itself all the wildness of the Western Highlands with the verdure of the South of France.

Byron’s description of Sintra’s romantic appeal is still telling two centuries later. Today it is home to two of Portugal’s most extraordinary palaces, the Palácio da Pena and the Palácio Nacional; some lavish private estates; and a Moorish castle, the Castelo dos Mouros, with breathtaking views over Lisbon. Sintra can be a confusing place in which to get your bearings. Basically, it consists of three distinct districts: functional Estefânia, around the train station; the attractive main town of Sintra-Vila; and, 2km to the east, the separate village of São Pedro de Sintra. It’s Sintra-Vila and its environs that have most of the hotels and restaurants and the main sights. Within reach, too, are semitropical gardens and small-scale resorts on a craggy coastline boasting Europe’s most westerly point – to do it justice, give yourself the best part of two full days here.

Sintra’s annual festa in honour of St Peter is held on June 28 and 29, while in July and August the Sintra Music Festival puts on classical performances in a number of the town’s buildings. The end of July also sees the Feira Grande in São Pedro, with crafts, antiques and cheeses on sale.

  • Strange happenings in Sintra
  • Palácio Nacional