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  2. António Botto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/António_Botto

    1942 – Os Contos de António Botto para Crianças e Adultos (short stories) 1943 – A Guerra dos Macacos (short stories) 1945 – As Comédias de António Botto (theatre) 1947 – Ódio e Amor (poems) 1948 – Songs (English translation by Fernando Pessoa of Canções) 1953 – Histórias do Arco da Velha (children's stories)

  3. Palace of Correio-Mor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palace_of_Correio-Mor

    Tamagnini, Matilde Figueiredo, "Palácio do Correio-Mor em Loures", Belas Artes, Revista e Boletim da Academia Nacional de Belas-Artes (in Portuguese) (Série 2 ed.), pp. 101– 122; Stoop, Anne de (1986), Quintas e palácios nos arredores de Lisboa (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal {}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher

  4. Museum of Portuguese Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Portuguese_Music

    The Museum of Portuguese Music (Portuguese: Museu da Música Portuguesa) is a small museum housed in the Casa Verdades de Faria in Estoril, municipality of Cascais, Portugal, on the Portuguese Riviera. It contains a collection of Portuguese musical instruments and other items, as well as a music documentation centre, and is also used for recitals.

  5. Music of Portugal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Portugal

    Portugal has had a history of receiving different musical influences from around the Mediterranean Sea, across Europe and former colonies. In the two centuries before the Christian era, Ancient Rome brought with it Greek influences; early Christians, who had their differing versions of church music arrived during the height of the Roman Empire; the Visigoths, a Romanized Germanic people, who ...

  6. Music history of Portugal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_history_of_Portugal

    King Dinis I of Portugal, from the Semblanzas de reyes.. In Portugal, an aristocratic poetical-musical genre was cultivated, at least since the independence (1139), whose texts are kept in three main collections (Cancioneiros): Cancioneiro da Ajuda (13th century), Cancioneiro da Biblioteca Nacional (16th, on originals from the 14th), Cancioneiro da Vaticana (16th, on originals from the 14th).

  7. List of Portuguese composers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Portuguese_composers

    Filipe da Madre de Deus (1633–1688), composer and kapellmeister of the royal music chamber; King Peter II (1648–1706), King of Portugal and composer (only ten organ pieces) João Rodrigues Esteves, (1700–1751) composer of religious music; Carlos Seixas (1704–1742), composer and organist

  8. Casa da Música - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casa_da_Música

    The Casa da Música is a concert hall in Porto, Portugal.It was designed by architect Rem Koolhaas and opened in 2005.. Designed to mark the festive year of 2001 in which the city of Porto was designated European Capital of Culture, it was the first building in Portugal aimed from its conception to be exclusively dedicated to music, either in public performances or in the field of artistic ...

  9. List of music museums - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_music_museums

    Museo de la Música Étnica, music cultures worldwide – Barranda, Murcia [105] Casa Museo Manuel de Falla, dedicated to Manuel de Falla – Granada [106] Casa Museo Andrés Segovia, dedicated to Andrés Segovia – Linares, Jaén [107] Museo de Raphael, dedicated to Raphael – Linares, Jaén [108] Interactive musical museum of Málaga ...