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Cathedral of Aveiro Igreja matriz de Santa Maria de valega; Válega. Capela de Nossa Senhora do Desterro (Arada) Capela do Senhor do Calvário (); Cathedral of Aveiro; Church of São João Evangelista
Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal. The Parochial Memories of 1758 (Portuguese: Memórias Paroquiais de 1758) are the results of an enquiry sent to every parish in Portugal after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake by the order of Sebastião de Carvalho e Melo, the Secretary of State of Internal Affairs of the Kingdom.
Three other bishops of note were Rodrigo da Cunha (1627–35), historian of the church in Portugal and author of a monograph on the Bishops and Archbishops of Braga; Rodrigo de Moura Teles (1704–28), who sponsored the restoration of the cathedral; and Diogo de Sousa, bishop of Porto (1496-1505) and Archbishop of Braga (1505-1532), protector ...
When Portugal separated from León in 1139, Braga assumed even greater importance. It contested with Toledo the primacy over all the Iberian sees, but the popes decided in favour of the latter city. Since it retained as suffragans the dioceses of Porto, Coimbra, Viseu, Bragança-Miranda do Douro, Aveiro and Pinhel.
The Archiepiscopal Palace of Braga (Portuguese: Paço Arquiepiscopal de Braga), is a Portuguese episcopal palace in civil parish of Braga (São José de São Lázaro e São João do Souto), in the municipality of the same name, in the northern district of Braga.
Monterey, Guido de (1981), Santa Maria e São Miguel (Açores): as duas ilhas do oriente (in Portuguese), Porto, Portugal: Ed. do Autor, p. 352; Ficha 63/Santa Maria do "Arquivo da Arquitectura Popular dos Açores". Ficha D-2 do "Inventário do Património Histórico e Religioso para o Plano Director Municipal de Vila do Porto".
The chapel is located in an urban environment within the historic centre of Braga, alongside the Church of São João do Souto, in the civil parish of the same name.It is situated along a road, whose posterior façade faces the Palace of Coimbras, across from the Casa do Passadiço, southeast from the Church of Santa Cruz and Hospital of São Marcos.
561-563 - Religious council meets in Braga. [5] 572 - Religious council meets in Braga. [5] 675 - Religious council meets in Braga. [5] 8th C. - Moors in power. [4] 1040 - Braga taken by forces of Ferdinand I. [4] 1089 - Braga Cathedral consecrated. 1093 - Braga becomes seat of royal court (until 1147). [4] 1417 - Fernando da Guerra becomes ...