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  <title><![CDATA[The Rough Guide to Portugal, 9th (Portugal (Rough Guides))]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[INTRODUCTION  <p>I am very happy here, because I loves oranges, and talks bad Latin to the Monks,  who understand it as it is like their own. And I goes into society (with my  pocket pistols) and I swims in the Tagus all across at once, and I rides on an  ass or a mule and swears Portuguese, and I have got a diarrhoea, and bites from  the mosquitoes. But what of that? Comfort must not be expected by folks that go  a-pleasuring. Byron in Portugal, July 1809.  <p>Portugal is an astonishingly beautiful country, the rivers, forests and lush  valleys of the north are a splendid and complementary contrast to its contorted  southern coastline of beaches, cliffs and coves. If you've come from the arid  plains of central Spain, Portugal's dry southern Alentejo region doesn't promise  any immediate relief, but - unlike Spain - you don't have to travel very far to  witness so total a contrast that it's hard, at first, to take in. Suddenly the  landscape is infinitely softer and greener, with flowers and trees everywhere.  Life also seems easier-paced and the people more courteous; the Portuguese  themselves talk of their nation as a land of brandos costumes - gentle ways.  For so small a country, Portugal sports a tremendous cultural diversity. There  are highly sophisticated resorts along the coast around Lisbon and on the well- developed Algarve in the south, upon which European tourists have been  descending for around thirty years. Lisbon itself, in its idiosyncratic, rather  old-fashioned way, has enough diversions to please most city devotees; the  massive development projects that accompanied the 1998 Lisbon Expo firmly  locking it into modern Europe without quite jettisoning its most endearing,  ramshackle qualities. But in the rural areas - the Alentejo, the mountainous  Beiras, or northern Trs-os-Montes - this is often still a conspicuously  underdeveloped country. Tourism and European Union membership have changed many  regions - most notably in the north, where new road building scythes through the  countryside - but for anyone wanting to get off the beaten track, there are  limitless opportunities to experience smaller towns and rural areas that still  seem rooted in the last century.   <p>In terms of population, and of customs, differences between the north and south  are particularly striking. Above a roughly sketched line, more or less  corresponding with the course of the Rio Tejo (River Tagus), the people are of  predominantly Celtic and Germanic stock. It was here, in the north at Guimares,  that the &quot;Lusitanian&quot; nation was born, in the wake of the Christian reconquest  from the North African Moors. South of the Tagus, where the Roman, and then the  Moorish, civilizations were most established, people tend to be darker-skinned  (moreno) and maintain perhaps more of a &quot;Mediterranean&quot; lifestyle (though the  Portuguese coastline is, in fact, entirely Atlantic). Agriculture reflects this  divide as well, with oranges, figs and cork in the south, and more elemental  corn and potatoes in the north. Indeed, in the north the methods of farming date  back to pre-Christian days, based on a mass of tiny plots divided and subdivided  over the generations.   <p>More recent events are also woven into the pattern. The 1974 Revolution, which  brought to an end 48 years of dictatorship, came from the south - an area of  vast estates, rich landowners and a dependent workforce - while the later  conservative backlash came from the north, with its powerful religious  authorities and individual smallholders wary of change. But more profoundly even  than the Revolution, it is emigration that has altered people's attitudes and  the appearance of the countryside. After Lisbon, the largest Portuguese  community is in Paris, and there are migrant workers spread throughout France,  Germany and North America. Returning, these emigrants have brought in modern  ideas and challenged many traditional rural values. New ideas and cultural  influences have arrived, too, through Portugal's own immigrants from the old  African colonies of Cape Verde, Mozambique and Angola.  <p>The greatest of all Portuguese influences, however, is the sea. The Atlantic  seems to dominate the land not only physically, producing the consistently  temperate climate, but mentally and historically, too. The Portuguese are very  conscious of themselves as a seafaring race; mariners like Vasco da Gama led the  way in the discovery of Africa and the New World, and until comparatively  recently Portugal remained a colonial power, albeit one in deep crisis. Such  links long ago brought African and South American strands into the country's  culture: in the distinctive music of fado, blues-like songs heard in Lisbon and  Coimbra, for example, or the Moorish-influenced Manueline, or Baroque  &quot;Discovery&quot;, architecture that provides the country's most distinctive  monuments.  <p>This &quot;glorious&quot; history has also led to the peculiar national characteristic of  saudade: a slightly resigned, nostalgic air, and a feeling that the past will  always overshadow the possibilities of the future. The years of isolation under  the dictator Salazar, which yielded to democracy after the 1974 Revolution,  reinforced such feelings, as the ruling elite spurned &quot;contamination&quot; by the  rest of Europe. Only in the last decade or so, with Portugal's entry into the  European Union, have things really begun to change. A belated industrial  revolution is finally underway, and the Portuguese are becoming increasingly  geared toward Lisbon and the cities. For those who have stayed in the  countryside, however, life remains traditional - disarmingly so to outsiders -  and social mores seem fixed in the past. Women still wear black if their  husbands are absent, as many are, working in France, or Germany, or at sea.</p></p></p></p></p></p>]]></description>
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    <![CDATA[The Rough Guide to Portugal, 9th]]>
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    <![CDATA[INTRODUCTION  <p>I am very happy here, because I loves oranges, and talks bad Latin to the Monks,  who understand it as it is like their own. And I goes into society (with my  pocket pistols) and I swims in the Tagus all across at once, and I rides on an  ass or a mule and swears Portuguese, and I have got a diarrhoea, and bites from  the mosquitoes. But what of that? Comfort must not be expected by folks that go  a-pleasuring. Byron in Portugal, July 1809.  <p>Portugal is an astonishingly beautiful country, the rivers, forests and lush  valleys of the north are a splendid and complementary contrast to its contorted  southern coastline of beaches, cliffs and coves. If you've come from the arid  plains of central Spain, Portugal's dry southern Alentejo region doesn't promise  any immediate relief, but - unlike Spain - you don't have to travel very far to  witness so total a contrast that it's hard, at first, to take in. Suddenly the  landscape is infinitely softer and greener, with flowers and trees everywhere.  Life also seems easier-paced and the people more courteous; the Portuguese  themselves talk of their nation as a land of brandos costumes - gentle ways.  For so small a country, Portugal sports a tremendous cultural diversity. There  are highly sophisticated resorts along the coast around Lisbon and on the well- developed Algarve in the south, upon which European tourists have been  descending for around thirty years. Lisbon itself, in its idiosyncratic, rather  old-fashioned way, has enough diversions to please most city devotees; the  massive development projects that accompanied the 1998 Lisbon Expo firmly  locking it into modern Europe without quite jettisoning its most endearing,  ramshackle qualities. But in the rural areas - the Alentejo, the mountainous  Beiras, or northern Trs-os-Montes - this is often still a conspicuously  underdeveloped country. Tourism and European Union membership have changed many  regions - most notably in the north, where new road building scythes through the  countryside - but for anyone wanting to get off the beaten track, there are  limitless opportunities to experience smaller towns and rural areas that still  seem rooted in the last century.   <p>In terms of population, and of customs, differences between the north and south  are particularly striking. Above a roughly sketched line, more or less  corresponding with the course of the Rio Tejo (River Tagus), the people are of  predominantly Celtic and Germanic stock. It was here, in the north at Guimares,  that the &quot;Lusitanian&quot; nation was born, in the wake of the Christian reconquest  from the North African Moors. South of the Tagus, where the Roman, and then the  Moorish, civilizations were most established, people tend to be darker-skinned  (moreno) and maintain perhaps more of a &quot;Mediterranean&quot; lifestyle (though the  Portuguese coastline is, in fact, entirely Atlantic). Agriculture reflects this  divide as well, with oranges, figs and cork in the south, and more elemental  corn and potatoes in the north. Indeed, in the north the methods of farming date  back to pre-Christian days, based on a mass of tiny plots divided and subdivided  over the generations.   <p>More recent events are also woven into the pattern. The 1974 Revolution, which  brought to an end 48 years of dictatorship, came from the south - an area of  vast estates, rich landowners and a dependent workforce - while the later  conservative backlash came from the north, with its powerful religious  authorities and individual smallholders wary of change. But more profoundly even  than the Revolution, it is emigration that has altered people's attitudes and  the appearance of the countryside. After Lisbon, the largest Portuguese  community is in Paris, and there are migrant workers spread throughout France,  Germany and North America. Returning, these emigrants have brought in modern  ideas and challenged many traditional rural values. New ideas and cultural  influences have arrived, too, through Portugal's own immigrants from the old  African colonies of Cape Verde, Mozambique and Angola.  <p>The greatest of all Portuguese influences, however, is the sea. The Atlantic  seems to dominate the land not only physically, producing the consistently  temperate climate, but mentally and historically, too. The Portuguese are very  conscious of themselves as a seafaring race; mariners like Vasco da Gama led the  way in the discovery of Africa and the New World, and until comparatively  recently Portugal remained a colonial power, albeit one in deep crisis. Such  links long ago brought African and South American strands into the country's  culture: in the distinctive music of fado, blues-like songs heard in Lisbon and  Coimbra, for example, or the Moorish-influenced Manueline, or Baroque  &quot;Discovery&quot;, architecture that provides the country's most distinctive  monuments.  <p>This &quot;glorious&quot; history has also led to the peculiar national characteristic of  saudade: a slightly resigned, nostalgic air, and a feeling that the past will  always overshadow the possibilities of the future. The years of isolation under  the dictator Salazar, which yielded to democracy after the 1974 Revolution,  reinforced such feelings, as the ruling elite spurned &quot;contamination&quot; by the  rest of Europe. Only in the last decade or so, with Portugal's entry into the  European Union, have things really begun to change. A belated industrial  revolution is finally underway, and the Portuguese are becoming increasingly  geared toward Lisbon and the cities. For those who have stayed in the  countryside, however, life remains traditional - disarmingly so to outsiders -  and social mores seem fixed in the past. Women still wear black if their  husbands are absent, as many are, working in France, or Germany, or at sea.</p></p></p></p></p></p>]]>
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