A local guide to visiting Feira da Ladra Lisbon! The famous flea market occurs Tuesday and Saturday. Bring cash, try to bargain and enjoy the vibe!
This – this was a true market. Locals selling, locals buying.
Portugal Shopping Guide Welcome to the ultimate shopping guide to Portugal! Whether you're in the hunt for a cool souvenir or you're planning to visit a typical market, this article has you covered. Keep reading
Loulé is a traditional market town located approximately 18km north of Faro in the Algarve. It's a small town that even in the summer manages to avoid much of the hustle and bustle of the
COISAS // Boho market bag, artisan made in the heart of Portugal. Soft natural cotton cord crafted in classic macrame techniques. No waste with the reusable market shopping bag, or beach bag. Unique and sutainable gift for your loved one. Designed uniquely - for a conciuos way of life. Made exclusively with earth-friendly materials. Better for the planet - better for you! ♻ // Thank you for visiting our Shop - I hope you enjoy the KHIPU.crafts collection! ☀ If you have any questions about the item, please please do not hesitate to send me a message. //
Author: Emma Higgins // September 9th 2016 I enter, and the first thing I hear is the thump of a chopping knife. In the high-ceilinged building, the noise reverberates and rings around the…
Vendors at Feira da Ladra, Lisbon's flea market, set up at Campo de Santa Clara every Tuesday and Saturday with an eclectic mix of clothing and collectibles.
Chestnut fair, Marvão, Alentejo. Portugal
Madeira Mercado dos Lavradores
A far la spesa a Bolhão. Going shopping in Bolhão.
One of the best ways to discover a new country or city is by visiting a local market. Thankfully, Lisbon has plenty of markets where locals and tourists alike enjoy spending time! Visit a food market, discover gems at flea market Feira da Ladra, or find the best craft markets. Let's take a look at the many Lisbon markets where you can shop!
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The ultimate list of 15 best markets in Portugal (in 2024). Top markets for food, artisan crafts, clothing & more. Popular spots + hidden local gems ...
Loulé is a traditional market town located approximately 18km north of Faro in the Algarve. It's a small town that even in the summer manages to avoid much of the hustle and bustle of the
The ultimate list of 15 best markets in Portugal (in 2024). Top markets for food, artisan crafts, clothing & more. Popular spots + hidden local gems ...
Handicrafts of Portugal exposed on a wall. Algarve, Portugal
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On the stalls In the local slave market of Lagos, Algarve. I would loved to have brought this home with me although I think I would have needed mass catering to use it!
A portrait of Northern Portugal's cuisine and culture as told through the stories and recipes of the women of Porto's historic Bolhão Market, who have been selling produce and creating traditional artisan goods for generations. A portrait of Northern Portugal's cuisine and culture as told through the stories and recipes of the women of Porto's historic Bolhão Market, who have been selling produce and creating traditional artisan goods for generations.
Funchal market
Vendors at Feira da Ladra, Lisbon's flea market, set up at Campo de Santa Clara every Tuesday and Saturday with an eclectic mix of clothing and collectibles.
With over articles on this travel blog, you’ll find a curated list of the best articles on this site related to planning a trip.
Setúbal's true soul no doubt rests with its extraordinarily resilient people, the history of its various trades and its unique position 40 kilometres south of Lisbon at the mouth of the broad River Sado, with miles of sandy beaches opposite and the verdant Arrábida mountain range, much of it within a national park, just to the west. For the purposes of a first blog entry on a remarkable place with which I fell very quickly in love, though, let's deal with a quiet heart, an easy refuge in the middle of a city that never feels too busy, more of a town which may be suffering as badly as anyone from the truly dismal Portuguese recession, but in the brilliant sunshine of late May and from a callow tourist's perspective hardly felt like it. We were lucky to be there as guests of the annual Setúbal Music Festival - now covered in an Arts Desk special - led for four days by a thousand jubilant children and with a general feeling that culture really was bringing a better life to this port on the western edge of Europe. This is the newly restored wall of the Convento de Jesus, its cloisters under wraps, the treasures of its gallery temporarily housed in a handsome bank building on the Avenue Luisa Todi which forms a garden promenade on the south side of the old town. The stone of the porch and columns is the lovely reddish, mottled breccia from Arrábida, the green mountain we'll visit in a future entry. Here's the sort of landscape we're talking about, prior to a very cold dip. My information on the convent's history is limited: one of Setúbal's charms is that it really isn't set up even for cultural tourism, so there were no guide books of any kind. They have, at least started to put brief history plaques outside the major edifices, and from this one I learnt that the building was founded in 1491 by Justa Rodrigues Pereira, King John II's nursemaid and court noblewoman. After John's death in 1495 Manuel I took over the support of the building and engaged Diogo de Boitaca - his first known commission, long before his celebrated work on the Jerónimos Monastery in the Lisbon parish of Belém - three years later. His are the most striking stone additions, making the Convent of Jesus the first gem of Manueline style. The pillars' three plaited columns of this late Gothic architectural movement are as surprising as the very different ones in Belém (which I dimly remember from our first, and less successful, visit through a film of sickness from eating poisoned eels. One positive result of that trip was that J got a cold and gave up smoking, a resolution he has maintained to this day. But I digress). Up in the roof of the choir, the patterns of twisted rope are also typical of Manueline style while in the nave the columns offset characteristic 17th century Portuguese blue and white tiles, the famous azulejos (there's a major factory nearby which ships extensively to South America). The ones on the north side depict the life of Mary, including elephant and castle. There's a large mullioned window with late Gothic tracery, handsome both within and without. Jesus Square, fringed on one side by friendly little cafes but hardly a hive of activity, was donated by Jorge de Lencestre, bastard son of King John II and Master of the Order of Santiago (thanks, Wiki). His commissioning work is also the cross, originally placed near the apse of the church but moved in the 19th century to the middle of the square. A stroll around the back reveals a pretty Franciscan chapel and an old, disused bath house, with the chimney of one of the many former tanneries in the town behind it. What a unified masterpiece this chapel would be if the fourteen panels of its great altarpiece could be restored to their rightful place. In fact these vibrant Renaissance biblical scenes, the work of the great Lisboan Jorge Afonso and his workshop, had been hanging next door in the monastery gallery for years and during restoration are now down the road in the town's main exhibition space, to administrators of which I'm grateful for this shot (four of the panels are displayed to the side of the central group). We met some very likeable, I would be impertinent enough to say loveable, local worthies on our festival visit.. Among them was Hugo Ricciardi O'Neill, a putative king of Ireland, guardian of a branch of the O'Neill dynasty of Clanaboy which has been in Portugal since the 18th century: as Portuguese-intellectual as they come and with the most charming, friendly and natural Spanish wife, Carmen. He loved our idea of getting high quality reproductions installed in the chapel if the originals simply can't hang there: this is a project for the future, maybe in collaboration with our own National Gallery's reproduction scheme. The other churches of Setúbal's old town all have their charms. We weren't expecting the monumental gilt wood altarpiece of Santa Maria, serving as the city's cathedral. The 13th century building had a full makeover in the second half of the 16th. The work of Master Jose de Rodrigues Ramalho, and dated 1697, the altarpiece makes a sobering contrast with the city's essential poverty: wasn't the divide between the clergy and the populace ever thus? In addition there are Tuscan columns, some tilework and an 18th century painted ceiling. We heard fine religious works by Victoria and - actually more interesting - several Renaissance Portuguese composers sung by a small vocal ensemble, the Grupo Vocal Olisipo, led by the most individual and impressive of sopranos, Elsa Cortez. But more of that over on the Arts Desk. São Julião, down in the main Bocage Square, is covered with more azulejos depicting the extraordinary life of its saint, but is more remarkable for its position in the general ensemble while São Sebastião, secluded up the hill, has two of the glorious jacaranda trees for which Setúbal is celebrated - and we were there at the right time for the fragrant purple blossom - in its courtyard. Some interesting painted woodwork inside and of course the pierced saint on the altar but the church was more remarkable for its active youth centre in the cloisters, with a volleyball court on the roof. The saint again alongside Fatima above a doorway opposite is typical of Setúbal's ruined splendour: many of the prettiest houses are the most neglected. More tiled but declining splendours in the old town. This one has some typically meaningful graffiti on the wall round the corner ('all different, all equal'). The painted walls of Setúbal need to form the backbone of a future post. Maybe they take their cue from the personal tiling: presumably this disused villa has its owner depicted. That adds to a certain sense of the picturesque, and also to the greedy northern European instinct for redevelopment. I did mention this to Sophie, who's just left us to return to her hotel in Djenne after a super day we spent together at Glyndebourne - there's contrast for her - and she jumped at the chance to make a boutique hotel there. But don't worry - Setúbal will never be a mass tourist destination, though it deserves much better than the cursory glance in my old Rough Guide ('most of its charm is long gone': nonsense, you just have to look, and not too hard in the old town proper). Should end this first instalment at another big city temple - the amazing market building which was restored, though at the loss of several lives when its south wall collapsed. The basic idea was worthwhile, though, because quite apart from the abundance of fruit and vegetables the azulejos form a distinguished background to one of the best fish markets I've ever seen. Swordfish aplenty as well as the cuttlefish which yield the local speciality, chocos fritos and tuna (I'm not sure I've ever seen a big 'un so cut before). The Lisboans come here every Sunday for their seafood lunches, and for good reason. Hell, I'd even fly there for a couple of meals and a night. And we shall without a shadow of a doubt be back.
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