Piódão: A Historic Village in Portugal
Hello friends, during our journey we visited a village named Piódão. It's one of Portugal's historic villages and part of a special union of 12 historical villages. In my opinion it's one of the most charming, so I wanted to share with you about this village today.
This village was founded by shepherds in the early 17th and 18th centuries. Grass grows on the mountain slopes here, where shepherds used to bring their flocks. There are also springs and streams providing both food and drink for the animals. What makes this village special is the material used for construction. Buildings, bridges, roads and sturdy walls are all made of schist. Schist is a layered and very interesting material that allows for highly textured walls to be built.
Perhaps the most striking feature of Piódão is its authentic and characteristic architecture. The village is small, so there aren't many tourist spots, but there are some interesting things. The main attraction is certainly the views.
The most famous person from Piodão is Manuel Fernandes Nogueira, a local clergyman. He served in the main church here. During his time, the church was renovated, a bell tower and clock were added and he established a college for local children to prepare them for seminary. The church is quite beautiful, restored with painted statues inside. Also the views from these terraces are quite stunning. I don't know what they grow, but this region is a wine-producing area. If you're in Portugal, be sure to try the red wines from this region. They're relatively inexpensive but quite interesting. I think they're not worse than the popular wines of Lisbon and the Douro Valley.
By the way local streams don't flow randomly. They're specially directed. This is done to ensure the decomposition of grass by watering it, thus creating compost or fertilizer. This is also quite interesting.
The clever inhabitants of Piodão have created a communal threshing floor at the top of the village with a magnificent view. Here, the process of threshing grain was carried out for the entire village. Everything related to bread production in this village is communal. Not many people lived here then and still don't. They would thresh the harvested crops and probably bring the grain down. Apart from the communal oven, there are very interesting footprints carved directly into the stone at the place where bread was baked for the entire village. It seems to be some kind of charm or protection symbol. Saint Peter, the guardian of the roads, is a friend and protector of Piódão, as written in the Peter Chapel here, both on earth and in heaven.
Piódão seems like a fascinating place with its unique signage system to prevent confusion on the paths. These signs are everywhere and help you navigate without getting lost, which is quite handy. However the Piodãos have also placed crosses above their entrances to provide extra protection for their homes, which adds to the charm. And there are horseshoes added for further protection, making it even more enchanting.
If you head a bit left from the entrance, just to the left of the main church, you'll find a wonderful walking path surrounded by charming houses. If you go to the right of the church, you'll see olive groves on the other side. There's another micro-tourist attraction here, the Chapel of Capela dos Penitentes, dedicated to repentant souls. There are small streams flowing everywhere.
It sounds lovely and I'm glad you enjoyed it so much. If you ever visit Portugal, you'll surely enjoy it too. By the way, there are some nice restaurants on the central square offering Portuguese food and wine. For example, grilled lamb with spinach is really delicious.
If you have the chance, I highly recommend visiting this wonderful village.
Congratulations, your post has been added to the TravelFeed Map! 🎉🥳🌴
Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!
Want to have your post on the map too?
- Go to TravelFeed Map
- Click the create pin button
- Drag the marker to where your post should be. Zoom in if needed or use the search bar (top right).
- Copy and paste the generated code in your post (any Hive frontend)
- Or login with Hive Keychain or Hivesigner and click "create post" to post to Hive directly from TravelFeed
- Congrats, your post is now on the map!
PS: You can import your previous Pinmapple posts to the TravelFeed map.Opt Out
Congratulations, your post has been added to WorldMapPin! 🎉
Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!
Want to have your post on the map too?
Congratulations @larissalugo! You received a sweet smile from TravelFeed. We love your work so keep up the good job. 😊
Thanks for using TravelFeed!
@for91days (TravelFeed team)
PS: Did you know that we have our own Hive frontend at TravelFeed.com? For your next travel post, log in to TravelFeed with Hive Keychain or Hivesigner and take advantage of our exclusive features for travel bloggers.
Thanks 😊
Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Honorable Mentions in Travel Digest #2241.
Your post has been manually curated by the @worldmappin team. If you like what we're doing, please drop by to check out all the rest of today's great posts and consider supporting other authors like yourself and us so we can keep the project going!
Become part of our travel community:
Thanks 😊
Looks like some old shepherds villages that I visited in my country, I really like these kind of places 💕
Old shepherd villages really have a rich historical charm. 😍
the last two photos, the food really makes my mouth watering!
I'm glad you liked the photos. Thank you for stopping by 🤗
Yeah, the place is charming and I like the uniformity of the houses. Same structure. 😊
Thank you. I'm glad you find it charming 🤗
You're welcome. 😊 Greetings. 😊
Keep up the good work. 👏🎵
Dear beloved Hive creator,
Coding poet Gudasol here to support you sharing your art + life on Hive.
As a fellow creator, I know how hard it is to get the word out there.
I built cXc.world to help creators like us get more support from the blockchain community + beyond.
Share your music on cXc.world, and copy the Markdown for a easy post includes embedded players for Spotify, Youtube, Soundcloud.
That way, you can earn HIVE + stack streams on centralized platforms, as they do still matter.
Not a music creator? No problem. You can still use cXc.world to find + share music you love.
What's next?
Preview the next evolution of cXc, Tetra.earth.
Expose local music from your area!
We're helping grassroots musicians, and you can too by adding their music (no sign up or WAX account required).
Join our community 🐬
Find fellow music lovers in cXc's Discord
Bad news: Saying see you later to Hive! 👋
We didn't get the needed support to continue cXc.world on Hive, as our DHF proposal lacked votes, but [Good News Everyone] cXc.world will add a Markdown copy button, allowing you to easily share your music + music you find on Hive.
For now, we're on WAX, with tools you can use to mint your own Music/Media NFT collection.
Curious about the future of Earth + ET relations? New economic systems?
Find more apps + art from Gudasol
Want to build tools like I used to share this?
I'd love to show you some tips on AI Code generation