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Meliá Confort Coimbra |
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Rooms From: EUR 102
Av. Armando Gonçalves, 20, Coimbra, 3000
Near the centre of Coimbra, on a hillside just 100 metres from the University hospital. The city`s historical and commercial centre are just 500 metres away.
Situated in the new residential district of Coimbra, the Meliá Confort Coimbra provides the guest with a quiet, peaceful atmosphere, while affording quick and easy access to the citys main downtown business area.
In our hotel you will enjoy luxury and highly personalized service. If you want to feel at home, or even better, you can't go wrong with Meliá.
Local Attractions
Biblioteca Geral da Universidade (University Library) (2 km) - Established in the 18th century, the library shelters more than a million volumes. The interior consists of three high-ceilinged salons with marble floors and complemented with baroque decorations.
Igreja e Mosteiro da Santa Cruz (2 km) - This former monastery was founded in the late 12th century during the reign of Portugals first king. Tiles decorate the lower part of the walls inside. Elements of special interest are the pulpit, the choir stalls and the cloister.
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COIMBRA was Portugal's capital from 1143 to 1255 and it ranks behind only the cities of Lisbon and Oporto in historic importance. Its university, founded in 1290 and finally established here in 1537 after a series of moves back and forth to Lisbon, was the only one existing in Portugal until the beginning of this century. For a provincial town it has remarkable riches, and it's an enjoyable place to be, too - lively when the students are in town, sleepy during the holidays. The best time of all to be here is in May, when the students celebrate the end of the academic year in the Queima das Fitas , tearing or burning their gowns and faculty ribbons. This is when you're most likely to hear the Coimbra fado , distinguished from the Lisbon version by its mournful pace and complex lyrics.
Old Coimbra sits on a hill on the right bank of the River Mondego, with the university crowding its summit. The main buildings of the Old University , dating from the sixteenth century, are set around a courtyard dominated by a Baroque clocktower and a statue of João III looking remarkably like Henry VIII. The chapel is covered with azulejos - traditional glazed and painted tiles - and intricate decoration, but takes second spot to the Library (daily 9.30am-12.30pm & 2-5.30pm), a Baroque fantasy presented to the faculty by João V in the early eighteenth century.
Below the university, a good first stop is the Museu Machado de Castro (Tues-Sun 9.30am-12.30pm & 2-5.15pm), just down from the unprepossessing Sé Nova (New Cathedral). Named after an eighteenth-century sculptor, the museum is housed in the former archbishop's palace, which would be worth visiting in its own right even if it were empty. As it is, it's positively stuffed with sculpture, paintings, furniture and ceramics. The Sé Velha (Old Cathedral; daily 10am-noon & 2-7.30pm, closed Fri-Sun pm), halfway down the hill, is one of the most important Romanesque buildings in Portugal, little altered and seemingly unbowed by the years. Solid and square on the outside, it's also stolid and simple within, the decoration confined to a few giant conch shells and some unobtrusive azulejos . The Gothic tombs and low-arched cloister are equally restrained.
Restraint and simplicity certainly aren't the chief qualities of the Igreja de Santa Cruz (Mon-Sat 9am-noon & 2-5.45pm, Sun 4-6pm; for cloister), at the bottom of the hill past the city gates. Although it was founded before the Old Cathedral, nothing remains that has not been substantially remodelled. In the early sixteenth century Coimbra was the site of a major sculptural school; the new tombs for Portugal's first kings, Afonso Henriques and Sancho I, and the elaborately carved pulpit, are among its very finest works. The Manueline theme is at its clearest in the airy arches of the Cloister of Silence, its walls decorated with bas-relief scenes from the life of Christ.
It was in Santa Cruz that Dom Pedro had his court pay homage to the corpse of Inês de Castro, which had lain in the now ruined Convento de Santa Clara-a-Velha across the river, alongside the convent's founder, Saint-Queen Isabel. The tombs have long since been moved away, Inês's to Alcobaça and Isabel's to the Convento de Santa Clara-a-Nova (Tues-Sun 8.30am-6pm; for cloister), higher up the hill. Two features make the climb worthwhile: the silver tomb itself and the vast cloister financed by João V, whose devotion to nuns went beyond the bounds of spiritual comfort.
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